1 / 30

Regulation

Regulation. Chapter 9- Regulation. Regulation: The coordination and control of the life activities. The internal environment must remain stable  Homeostasis . Nervous and Endocrine systems. Stimulus: Any change in the internal or external environment that causes a response. Response:

nevin
Download Presentation

Regulation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Regulation

  2. Chapter 9- Regulation • Regulation: • The coordination and control of the life activities. • The internal environment must remain stableHomeostasis.

  3. Nervous and Endocrine systems • Stimulus: • Any change in the internal or external environment that causes a response. • Response: • Reaction to a stimulus. • Receptors: • Structures that are specialized to receive certain stimuli. Ex. Five senses.

  4. Impulse: • An electrochemical charge generated along a neuron. The message! • Effectors: • Parts of the body that respond. Ex. Muscles or glands.

  5. Neuron

  6. Neurons

  7. The Neuron: • Aka nerve cell- receives and transmits impulses. • Composed of: • Dendrites • Detect stimulus • Cell branches • Receives impulses • Cyton • Cell body that contains the nucleus • Axon • Branch of the cell that transmits impulses away from the cyton. • Terminal branches • End of the axon • Secretes neurotransmitters (made by synaptic knobs)

  8. Synapse: • Gap (space) between neurons • Neurotransmitters: • Chemicals secreted into the synapse by terminal branches. • Helps impulses jump the synapse. • Example acetylcholine, norepinephrine

  9. Types of Neurons: Pathway is always sensory ->inter->motor • Sensory neuron: • Carries impulse from receptors (5 senses) to brain and spinal cord (CNS). • Interneuron: • Neuron found between sensory and motor neurons. • Located in brain and spinal cord. • Motor neurons: • Carries impulse away from brain and spinal cord (CNS) to the effectors (muscles or glands).

  10. The Central Nervous System • made up of the brain and spinal cord • Interneurons here

  11. The Brain: • Composed of millions of neurons • 3 divisions • cerebrum: • largest part of the brain • area where sensory impulses are interpreted • memory, thinking, and reasoning

  12. cerebellum: • Balance and motor coordination • medulla: • connects spinal cord to the brain. • Controls involuntary activity: breathing, heart beat, digestion

  13. The Spinal Cord: • Thick nerve located within the vertebrae. • Protected by: vertebrae, meninges, cerebrospinal fluid. • Connects directly with the base of the brain. • Function: center for the reflex action • Reflexes: simple, involuntary, inborn patterns of behavior. • Reflex arc: pathway over which impulses travel. • Stimulus receptorsensory neuroninterneuronmotor neuroneffectors (RSIME!!)

  14. YouTube - Central Nervous System, Reflex Arc

  15. The peripheral nervous system (PNS) • Nerves outside CNS • Carry impulses to other parts of the body. • Breaks into somatic and autonomic • Somatic – voluntary activities Ex: batting a ball • Autonomic – involuntary activities Ex: breathing

  16. Malfunctions of the Nervous System • Cerebral Palsy • May occur before/during /after birth. • Damage to the motor areas of the brain. • Difficulty in coordinating voluntary muscle • Meningitis • Inflammation of the meninges. It can be viral or bacterial.

  17. Stroke • Supply of blood to the brain is cut off. A clot or a hemorrhage can form. • Brain damage and paralysis occurs. • Polio • Viral disease of the CNS. Results in paralysis.**Immunization- Salk and Sabin vaccine

More Related