Physiology of Exercise
Chapter 3: Neurological Control of Exercising Muscle
Chapter 3: Neurological Control of Exercising Muscle
Fichier Détails
Cartes-fiches | 54 |
---|---|
Langue | English |
Catégorie | Physique |
Niveau | Université |
Crée / Actualisé | 03.09.2016 / 03.09.2016 |
Lien de web |
https://card2brain.ch/box/physiology_of_exercise1
|
Intégrer |
<iframe src="https://card2brain.ch/box/physiology_of_exercise1/embed" width="780" height="150" scrolling="no" frameborder="0"></iframe>
|
Créer ou copier des fichiers d'apprentissage
Avec un upgrade tu peux créer ou copier des fichiers d'apprentissage sans limite et utiliser de nombreuses fonctions supplémentaires.
Connecte-toi pour voir toutes les cartes.
Peripheral Nervous System (PNS)
- Contains 43 pairs of nerves: 12pairs of cranial nerves & 31 pairs of spinal nerves
Two Major Divisions of PNS
Sensory Division
Motor Division
Sensory Division
continuously convey info to CNS concerning body’s constantly changing status, position and internal/external environment
Receives info from five primary types of receptors
Sensory Dividion of PNS receives info from what five primary types of receptors
- Mechanoreceptors: respond to mechanical forces such as pressure, touch, vibrations, or stretch
- Thermoreceptors: responds to changes in temperature
- Nociceptors: respond to painful stimuli
- Photoreceptors: respond to electromagnetic radiation (light) to allow vision
- Chemoreceptors: respond to chemical stimuli, from food, odors, change in blood or tissue concentrations of substances like oxygen, carbon dioxide, glucose and electrolytes
Motor Dividion of PNS
Once CNS processed info receives from sensory division, it determines how body should respond to input.
Autonomic Nervous System
- Controls the body’s involuntary internal functions (heart rate, blood pressure, lung function)
Two Major Divisions of autonomic nervous system
Sympathetic Nervous System
Parasympathetic Nervous System
Sympathetic Nervous System
Fight or Flight
Parasympathetic Nervous System
Rest & Digest
Causes decresed heart rate, constriction of coronary vessels, and bronchoconstriction
Sensory-Motor Integration
- Sensory stimulus is received by sensory receptors
- Sensory action potential is transmitted along sensory neurons to CNS
- CNS interprets the info and determines which response if most appropriate or reflexively initiates a motor response
- The AP for response are transmitted from CNS along a-motor neurons
- The motor AP is transmitted to a muscle, and response occurs
Motor Reflex
preprogrammed response
Muscle Spindle
- group of specialized muscle fibers found between regular skeletal muscle fibers referred to as extrafusal (outside the spindle)
- Consists of 4-20 small specialized intrafusal (inside the spindle) fibers and the nerve ending, sensory and motor associated with these fibers
y-motor neurons (gamma motor neurons)
control intrafusal fibers
a-motor neurons control by
extrafusal fibers
Golgi Tendon Organs
- Encapsulated sensory receptors through which a small bundles of muscle tendon fibers pass
- Trigger a reflex that inhibits contraction if tendon fibers are stretched from high muscle tension
Two parts of nervous system
Central Nervous System (CNS)
Peripheral Nervous SYstem (PNS)
Central Nervous System (CNS)
composed of the rain and spinal cord
Peripheral Nervous System (PNS)
divided into sensory (afferent) nerves and motor (efferent) nerves
Sensory Nerves
responsible for informing the CNS about what is going on within and outisde the body
Motor Nerves
are responsible for sending information from the CNS to various tissues, organs, and systems of body in response to signals coming in from sensory division.
Efferent Nervous System
composed of two parts, the autonomic nervous system and somatic nervous system.
Neuron
basic structural unit of nervous system.
Three regions of typical neuron
- cell body- contains nucleus
- dendrite- many in one neuron- neurons receivers
- axon- only one axon in neuron
Axon terminals/ Axon terminals
axon splits ino numerus end branches which go into tiny bulbs known as this
Neurotransmitters
used for communication between a neuron and another cell.
Nerve Impulse
electrical signal that arises when stimulus is strong enough to substantially change the normal electrical charge of the neuron
Resting Membrane Potential (RMP)
electrical potential difference caused by uneven separation of charged ions across membrane. -70mV
Imbalance causing RMP maintained in 2 ways:
1. Cell membrane is mre permeable to K+ than to Na+ , so K+ moves more freely
2. Sodium-potassum pumps in neuron membrane, which contain Na+-K+ adenosine triphosphatase, maintain imbalance on each side of membrane by actively transporting potassium ions in and sodium ions out.
Depolarization
occurs any time the charge difference becomes more positive than the RMP -70mV, moving closer to zero.
Hyperolarization
charge difference across membrane increases, moving from RMP to even more negative value, then membrane becomes more polarized
-
- 1 / 54
-