The Nervous System - History with Mr. Bayne
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Transcript The Nervous System - History with Mr. Bayne
The Nervous
System
AN EXCELLENT POWERPOINT ON THE NERVOUS SYSTEM AND HOW IT
WORKS.
Why study the nervous system?
Nervous system is involved in all things humans do (dream, sleep,
eat, wake, feel, think, text)
Two parts:
CNS – Central Nervous System (brain and spinal cord)
PNS – Peripheral Nervous System (nerve cells that send messages
from CNS to all parts of the body)
Can you believe the nerve of that
pushy salesperson?
Can you believe the nerve of that
pushy salesperson?
Well, nerve sells.
How does the nervous system
work?
Neurons – nerve cells that run through the body
Send and receive messages from muscles and glands
Over 100 billion neurons found in our body
That’s more than the amount of dollars in Mr. Bayne’s wallet
Mr. Bayne—what are these parts in
a neuron?
What are these ‘parts’ that you
speak of?
Dendrites – Receive the information and pass it thru cell body
Cell body – produces the energy to fuel the activity of the cell
Axon – carries message away from cell
body to the terminals (axon endings)
Axon is protected by myelin sheath
(white, fatty substance; helps protect
and speed up messages)
Axon terminals The end of the neuron,
sends out messages
Then what?
Once a message reaches the axon terminals, it must jump across a
gap
Synapse – the gap that it must
jump
It jumps from the axon terminal
to the dendrite of the next neuron
If it does not make this jump, the
message is lost
What types of neurons are there?
Sensory – Nerve cells that carry info to CNS (brain/spinal cord)
Motor – Nerve cells that send messages from CNS to PNS (tells
muscles/glands what to do)
Something like a concussion can affect this process
We’ve heard so much of these
neurotransmitters…what are they?
Chemicals located in axon terminals
that send messages across the synapse
Think of them as a spray bottle in how
they work
Low levels of chemicals could result in
major effects
Low levels of dopamine (which controls
motor behaviors) could lead to
uncoordinated movements—think of
Parkinson’s disease
Fascinating so far, right?
Well, there is more!
Remind me of what the CNS is.
Central Nervous System – the brain and the spinal cord
Spinal cord – protected by bones of spine
Transmits messages between the brain and the muscles/glands
throughout the body
Spinal reflexes – automatic response to something (hand touches stove)
Message goes through sensory neurons to spinal cord; spinal cord instantly
sends message back through motor neurons to remove hand)
PNS – This is my favorite
Peripheral Nervous System – Takes messages from CNS to the rest of
the body
Two main divisions – Somatic and the Autonomic Nervous System
If you were to lay out all the nerve cells in this
system, it would be very long.
Somatic Nervous System
First part of PNS
Sends sensory messages to CNS (this stove is hot)
Activated by touch, changes in temperature, body position, etc…)
Our motor movements and senses
Autonomic Nervous System (here is
where things get tricky)
Think ‘automatic’
Regulates body functions necessary for survival (heart beat,
breathing, digestion, etc..)
Two divisions – Sympathetic and Parasympathetic
‘S’ for Sympathetic, ‘S’ for stress
‘P’ for Parasympathetic, ‘P’ for Peace
Sympathetic
Activated when person is going into action (under stress)
Prepares the body to confront a situation or to run away
“Fight or flight” response
Example: You see someone in your yard with a gun, how do you
respond?
Or you look behind you and see an angry dog?
Parasympathetic – At peace
Restores the body’s reserves of energy when at rest;
Heart rate/blood pressure are normalized, breathing is slowed
Mr. Bayne, can you show us a
chart?
PNS
Nervous System
CNS
• Spinal Cord
• Brain
• Somatic
• Autonomic
• Sympathetic
• Parasympathetic
Scenario
Mr. Bayne sees that you got a wrong answer on a test, and as a
punishment, he steps on your toe. Create a detailed description of
how this involves the nervous system, using the following terms:
Somatic, autonomic, sympathetic, parasympathetic, dendrite,
sensory, motor, axon, myelin sheath, fight or flight