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The Nervous System and Endocrine System Compare and contrast • Both transmit signals to other areas of the body • Nervous system • Very rapid • Uses neurons to relay electrical and chemical signals • Controls all of the body (everything that the body does) • Endocrine System • Slower • Uses glands and hormones secreted into the blood vessels • Controls certain bodily functions (growth, metabolism, sexual development, use of minerals and other substances) The Nervous System • Group of organs that controls the body • Thought, movement, and all life processes • Responds to external stimuli • Information gathered through the senses • Stimulus-something that causes a response • Very fast • Information can pass in less than a second • 2 parts: • Central Nervous System • Brain and spinal cord • Peripheral Nervous System • Rest of the body Neurons • Cells of the nervous system • 3 main parts: • Cell Body • Contains the nucleus and organelles • Dendrite • Receive information from neighboring cells • Axon • Transmits information to other cells • 3 Types of Neurons: • Sensory neurons-Gather information • Interneurons- Receive and relay information to and from CNS • Motor neurons-Pass information from CNS to tissues Transmission of Information • Uses a concentration difference of ions (charged atoms) to create electrical signals through the neuron • Synapse • Area between neurons • Information leaves one neuron through the axon and crosses a synapse to the dendrite of another neuron • The information is in the form of chemical signals called neurotransmitters The Senses • The only way to gather information about your surroundings • Maintain homeostasis • Shiver when cold, sweat when hot, eyes dilate in dim lighting, etc. • 5 senses: • • • • • Sight Hearing Smell Taste Touch Vision • • • • Most used sense for humans The eye is the sensory organ Contains photoreceptors (rods and cones) Uses reflected light • The eye is covered with a protective layer called the cornea • Muscles around the iris (the colored portion) control the size of the pupil (the black circle), controlling how much light enters the eye • From the pupil, light passes through a lens, which focuses light on the back of the eye (retina) • Rods and cones on the retina generate nerve impulses that travel through the optic nerve to the brain Vision Problems • Nearsightedness (myopia) • Eyes focus on close objects, but not on far away ones • Light is focused in front of the retina • Farsightedness (hyperopia) • Eyes focus on far objects, but not close ones • Light is focused behind the retina • Astigmatism • Irregular curvature of the eye • Scatters light so that it hits multiple areas on the retina • All are easily corrected with lenses (glasses and contacts) Hearing • The ear is the sensory organ • Contains auditory receptors called hair cells • Ear has 3 parts: • Outer ear • Part we see is called the pinna • Pinna collects sound waves and focuses them into the auditory canal • At end of the auditory canal is the tympanic membrane (eardrum), which vibrates • Middle ear • 3 bones (malleus, incus, stapes) are vibrated by Tympanic membrane and amplify sound • Inner ear • Amplified sound enters fluid-filled cochlea, which contain hair cells • The hair cells bend as fluid moves, creating nerve impulses • Impulses travel through auditory nerve to brain The ear and balance • The semicircular canals (part of the cochlea) are also filled with fluid • As you move, the fluid moves and stimulates hair cells in the semicircular canals • They transmit impulses to the brain, which interprets them and orients your body Smell and Taste • Closely related senses • Each have chemoreceptors that detect molecules • The ones on your tongue are called taste buds • The chemoreceptors generate impulses that pass through nerves to the brain Touch • Sensed in the epidermis and dermis of the skin • Mechanoreceptors • Some are sensitive to light tough • Some are sensitive to pain • Some are only sensitive to deep touch • Some are wrapped around hair follicles and sense hair movement The Brain and Spinal Cord • Part of the CNS • Made up of neurons orientated in a pattern • Dense portions of cell bodies are called gray matter • Dense portions of axons are called white matter • In the brain, gray matter is on the outside • In the spinal cord, gray matter is on the inside • 3 layers of tissue protect the brain • Called meninges • If this becomes inflamed, it is meningitis • Brain divided into 3 main parts Cerebrum • Largest portion • Interprets signals from the body • Emotion, needs, motion, pain • 2 hemispheres connected by nerves • Each controls the opposite side of the body • The thick band of nerves connecting the hemispheres is called the corpus callosum • Outer layer of the cerebrum is the cerebral cortex (folded portion) • Areas of the cerebral cortex that do a task are called lobes • 4 main lobes • • • • Frontal: Planning, personality, reasoning, judgement, voluntary motion, speech (Broca’s area) Parietal: Touch and language processing Occipital: Vision Temporal: Speech interpretation, hearing, memory Cerebellum • Coordinates movement • Maintain posture and balance • Muscle memory Brain Stem • Connects brain to spinal cord • Controls involuntary actions • Reflexes Spinal Cord • Connects brain to rest of body • Delivers messages to muscles • Damage to spinal cord can lead to paralysis • Disconnects neurons from the brain • Reflexes pass to the spinal cord, then back to the muscle • Does not need to travel through the brain, so quicker Peripheral Nervous System • Connect CNS to rest of body • 2 parts: • Somatic Nervous System • Controls voluntary movement • Autonomic Nervous System • Controls involuntary movement • 2 parts: • Sympathetic Nervous System-”fight or flight” response • Parasympathetic Nervous System-calms body Important Neurotransmitters • Dopamine-Role in emotion, stress, and voluntary muscle movement • Serotonin-Role in emotion, muscle, and hunger • Homeostasis is maintained if the levels are correct • Incorrect levels of dopamine affect muscles • Can lead to Parkinson’s Disease and Schizophrenia • Incorrect levels of serotonin can lead to anxiety and depression Drugs and the Brain • Drugs alter the release of neurotransmitters • Can train your body to depend on them • Called addiction • When the drug is stopped, the body senses something is wrong and leads to the effects of withdrawal • Stimulants increase the release of neurotransmitters • Depressants reduce the release of neurotransmitters, or block the receptors The Endocrine System • Group of glands that release chemical messages into the blood • Called hormones • 2 categories of hormones • Steroid hormones • Attach to DNA • Nonsteroidal hormones • Chemical reaction in cytoplasm • Attach to target cells Main Endocrine Glands • Hypothalamus • Found in brain • Causes release of growth hormones and control the reproductive system • Controls the pituitary gland • Pituitary Gland • Also found in brain • Releases growth hormone and causes blood to absorb water from the kidneys • Also controls function of other glands More Endocrine Glands • Thyroid • In throat • Controls metabolism • Parathyroid • On thyroid • Controls how the body uses calcium • Thymus • In chest • Causes WBCs to mature and reproduce • Adrenal Glands • In torso above kidneys • Help respond to stress (“fight or flight”) Last of the Endocrine Glands • Pancreas • Between stomach and intestines • Controls the use of glucose • Produces insulin • Gonads • Ovaries in females and testes in males • Estrogen in females and testosterone in males • Release sex hormones, controls production of gametes, development of sex characteristics Feedback Loops • Positive Feedback • The production of a hormone causes more to be released • Not as common • Childbirth • Negative Feedback • The production of the hormone stops hormone release • Most common in body