THE BRAIN - Dublin City Schools
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Transcript THE BRAIN - Dublin City Schools
THE BRAIN
AND THE EFFECTS OF
ALCOHOL AND OTHER DRUGS
THE BRAIN
Command center of your body
Weighs about 3 pounds
Different centers which control
different things
Despite being 90-95 percent of its
adult size by age six, the brain is still
“under construction” until age 18.
BRAIN STEM
Vital life center
Breathing, swallowing, heart beat, sleeping
Things you never think about
Gulping large amounts of alcohol in a short
time can stop the breathing reflex and
cause death
CEREBELLUM
Responsible for things you learn once and
never have to think about again
Walking, riding a bike, throwing a ball
Higher thought processes like music and
complex math problems
Changes drastically during teen years,
increasing its number of nerve cells and
connections to the rest of the brain
CEREBRAL CORTEX
Also known as CEREBRUM
Divided into right and left hemispheres
Thinking part of the brain- most highly
developed
Store and process language, math and
strategies
Also contains the LIMBIC SYSTEM
Responsible for survival
Causes you to be hungry for good food and to enjoy
the company of others;
Emotions related to fear, anger and love
LIMBIC SYSTEM
Hippocampus and Amygdala
Memory
v Drugs can have powerful control of the brain
stem and limbic system. These systems can
override our cortex in controlling our
behavior.So, we do things without thinking!
NERVE CELLS AND
NEUROTRANSMISSIONS
NEURON- three parts
Cell body that directs all activities of the
neuron
Dendrites that receive messages-many fibers
Axons that send messages-long single fiber
NEUROTRANSMISSION
• The transfer of a message (electrical
impulse) from the axon of one nerve cell to
the dendrites of another
• No direct contact. There is a chemical
release (neurotransmitters) into the space
between the axon and dendrites. This
space is called a synapse. The
neurotransmitters bind to receptors in the
dendrites.
NEUROTRANSMITTERS
• Chemical messengers, carrying
information from one neuron to
another.
MYELIN
A fatty substance that covers axons.
The more myelin an axon has, the faster
nerve impulses can travel.
– After puberty, the amount of myelin in
the brain increases dramatically, making
the brain much more efficient.
ADDICTION AND THE
BRAIN
• The brain is wired so if something is
pleasurable, you will tend to do it again.
• Life sustaining activities, such as eating,
activate nerve cells devoted to producing
and regulating pleasure.The
neurotransmitter involved is called
DOPAMINE.
• The pleasure circuit (dopamine system)
spans the brainstem, emotional limbic
system and the frontal cerebral cortex
ADDICTION
• Drug addiction alters the way the pleasure
center, as well as other parts of the brain,
functions.
• Almost all drugs affect chemical
neurotransmission
– Heroin and LSD mimic natural
neurotransmitters
– PCP blocks receptors
– Cocaine interferes with getting
neurotransmitters back where they belong
– Methamphetamines cause too many
neurotransmitters to be released
Prolonged drug use causes addiction.