Term
How does diameter change the speed of membrane charging? |
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Definition
increasing the diameter increases the area so membrane potential change will be slower because there is more membrane to charge |
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Term
What assumption must be made to think that dendrites act like passive fibers? |
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Definition
there are not voltage gated ion channels |
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Term
From where do dendrites receive input? |
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Definition
synapses with axons of other neurons |
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Term
Do excitatory postsynaptic currents (EPSCs) cause big or small changes in the potentials of the dendritic membrane (EPSP)? |
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Definition
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Term
The EPSCs in the dendrites must make it all the way to the ______ to be integrated |
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Definition
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Term
Why is there a smaller EPSP recorded at the soma versus the dendrite? |
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Definition
lost current along the way |
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Term
Is the EPSP in the soma smaller & slower or bigger & faster than EPSP out on dendrite? |
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Definition
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Term
dendrite --> active or passive? |
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Definition
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Term
2 steps in the regeneration of an action potential from "point A" to "point B" in active channels |
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Definition
1. depolarization at "point A" opens voltage-gated sodium channels & the regenerative current gives rise to an action potential 2. the spread of the positive current from "point A" brings the next segment ("point B") to threshold for regenerative sodium current |
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Term
2 steps in active channels preventing current loss |
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Definition
1. current loss is prevented because each region is passively depolarized by the action potential generated in the preceding region 2. as long as threshold for the regenerative sodium current is met, the action potential is renewed in the next segment - prevents decrement |
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Term
Where action potential has already been, that part of the membrane is ______ |
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Definition
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Term
Part of the membrane that is maximally depolarized is where ______ |
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Definition
sodium is entering --> passively diffusing ahead to bring the next part of the axon to threshold (just starting to be depolarized, just approaching threshold) |
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Term
2 places where myelin (what wraps large nerve fibers) is formed |
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Definition
1. Schwann cells (PNS) 2. oligodendrocytes (CNS) |
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Term
The myelin acts as an insulator & greatly increases or decreases effective membrane resistance? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the relationship between number of wrappings (10 - 160) & resistance to current flow? |
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Definition
the greater the number of wrappings, the greater the resistance to current flow |
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Term
What are the spaces between myelinated areas? |
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Definition
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Term
What is effect of myelin on capacitance of axon? |
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Definition
decreasing capacitance because there is a greater distance between the charges stored on the outside of the myelin & the charges passing through the inside of the membrane |
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Term
What is effect of myelin on membrane resistance? |
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Definition
when you add myelin, you're increasing membrane resistance |
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Term
What is effect of myelin on longitudinal resistance? |
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Definition
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Term
What is effect of myelin on length constant? |
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Definition
length constant is much bigger! |
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Term
Nodes between axon myelination occur about every _____ mm |
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Definition
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Term
Axon myelination causes separation that is about _____x the diameter of the axon |
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Definition
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Term
The width of a node between axon myelination is about ______ microns |
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Definition
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Term
Schwann cells wrap ______ times around the axon! |
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Definition
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Term
Where are voltage gated channels restricted to in myelinated axons? |
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Definition
breaks in the myelin called Nodes of Ranvier |
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Term
Where are sodium channels concentrated in myelinated axons? |
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Definition
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Term
Where are potassium channels concentrated in myelinated axons |
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Definition
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Term
Myelin restricts current flow to the ______ where current flows easily through the channels |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
due to high resistance internodal regions, current jumps (saltare) from node to node |
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Term
Is myelination much more or much less efficient? |
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Definition
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Term
The diameters of myelinated axon can be _____x smaller than an unmyelinated axon & have the same effects |
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Definition
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Term
Velocity along a myelinated axon is _____x faster than an unmyelinated axon |
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Definition
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Term
Do you need more or fewer sodium/potassium ATPases in a myelinated axon? |
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Definition
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Term
Why does adding myelin to an axon decrease that section of the axon's capacitance? |
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Definition
think of outside of myelin & the internal axon membrane as the two plates...they are now very far apart! |
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Term
many myelin lipid layers --> more or less membrane resistance? |
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Definition
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Term
thinking in terms of distance (AP propagating from left to right): area ahead of the action potential = ? |
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Definition
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Term
outward capacitive current = hyperpolarizing or depolarizing? |
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Definition
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Term
Is sodium current passively hyperpolarizing or depolarizing the segment of axon ahead of it? |
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Definition
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Term
Why does the sodium current have a weird bump at the peak of the action potential? |
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Definition
the peak is where there's a puny sodium driving force; as the cell is repolarizing, there is a little bit more influx of sodium & then it just goes back up normally |
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Term
Is there a steady inward or outward capacitive current behind action potential? |
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Definition
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Term
What happens at the unmyelinated parts of an axon? |
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Definition
membrane potential changes/current is flowing |
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Term
When you are thinking in terms of distance, the AP is propagating from ______ to ______ |
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Definition
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Term
In a myelinated axon, sodium current is confined to ______ |
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Definition
Nodes of Ranvier (the unmyelinated parts of the axon) |
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Term
In a myelinated axon, capacitive currents are located just at the ______ |
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Definition
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Term
What is the key factor of AP propagation in a myelinated axon? |
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Definition
bring the next Node of Ranvier to threshold |
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Term
In a myelinated axon, behind AP, do you have inward or outward capacitive current? |
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Definition
inward (hyperpolarizing the nodes behind it) |
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