Chapter 11: Fundamentals of the Nervous System and Nervous Tissue:
The Nervous System:
-Master controlling and communicating system of body
- Cells communicate via electrical and chemical signals
- Rapid and specific
- Usually cause almost immediate responses
Functions of the Nervous System:
1.Sensory input information gathered by sensory receptors about internal and external
changes
2. Integration processing and interpretation of sensory input
3. Motor output activation of effector organs (muscles and glands) produces a response
Divisions of the Nervous System:
1.Central Nervous System (CNS)
- Brain and spinal cord of dorsal body cavity
- Integration and control center interprets sensory input and dictates motor output
2. Peripheral Nervous System (PNS)
- The portion of the nervous system outside CNS
- Consists mainly of nerves that extend from brain and spinal cord
- Spinal nerves to and from spinal cord
- Cranial nerves to and from brain
Peripheral Nervous System (PNS):
-Two functional divisions:
1. Sensory (afferent) division
- Somatic sensory fibers convey impulses form skin, skeletal muscles, and
joints to CNS
- Visceral sensory fibers convey impulses from visceral organs to CNS
2. Motor (efferent) division
- Transmits impulses from CNS to effector organs (i.e. muscles and glands)
- Two divisions:
1. Somatic Nervous System
2. Autonomic Nervous System
Somatic Nervous System:
-Somatic motor nerve fibers
- Conducts impulses from CNS to skeletal muscle
- Voluntary nervous system conscious control of skeletal muscle
Autonomic Nervous System:
,-Visceral motor nerve fibers
- Regulates smooth muscle, cardiac muscle, and glands
- Involuntary nervous system
- Two functional subdivisions:
1. Sympathetic
2. Parasympathetic
- Work in opposition of each other
Histology of Nervous Tissue:
-Highly cellular; little extracellular space
- Tightly packed
- Two principal cell types:
1. Neuroglia small cells that surround and wrap delicate neurons
2. Neurons (nerve cells) excitable cells that transmit electrical signals
Neuroglia:
-Astrocytes (CNS)
- Microglial cells (CNS)
- Ependymal cells (CNS)
- Oligodendrocytes (CNS)
- Satellite cells (PNS)
- Schwann cells (PNS)
Astrocytes:
-Found in CNS
- Function = “janitor”; shape = “sea anemone”
- Most abundant, versatile, and highly branched glial cells
- Cling to neurons, synaptic endings, and capillaries
- Functions include:
- Support and brace neurons
- Play role in exchanges between capillaries and neurons
- Guide migration of young neurons
- Control chemical environment around neurons
- Respond to nerve impulses and neurotransmitters
- Influence neuronal functioning participate in information processing in brain
, Microglial Cells:
-Found in CNS
- “White blood cells” of CNS
- Small, oval-shaped cells with thorny processes that touch and monitor neurons
- Migrate toward injured neurons
- Can transform to phagocytize microorganisms and neuronal debris
Ependymal Cells:
-Found in CNS
- Range in shape from squamous to columnar
- May be ciliated cilia beat to circulate cerebrospinal fluid
- Line the central cavities of the brain and spinal column
- Form permeable barrier between cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in cavities and tissue fluid bathing
CNS cells
- Makes CSF
Oligodendrocytes:
-Found in CNS
- Branched cells
- Processes wrap CNS nerve fibers, forming insulating myelin sheaths in thicker nerve fibers