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Keith_Richards [23]
3 years ago
15

Which cranial nerve does not carry motor commands to an eye muscle?

Medicine
1 answer:
jok3333 [9.3K]3 years ago
3 0

Answer:

The answer is A vagus nerve

Explanation:

The vagus nerve despite being part of the twelve cranial nerves does not innervate any eye muscle.

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Gastric secretion (choose the most appropriate answer
levacccp [35]

Answer:

option A is the appropriate answer

8 0
3 years ago
What are five common symptoms caused by lesions of the cerebellum?
bearhunter [10]

Answer:

1.Poor coordination.

2.Unsteady walk  

3.Difficulty with fine motor tasks,  

4.back-and-forth eye movements

5.Difficulty swallowing.

Explanation:

Ataxia or lesion of the cerebellum shows a lack of muscle control, such as walking or picking up objects, coordination of voluntary movement. It can affect movements, eye movement, creating difficulties with speech, and swallowing.

persistent lesion of the cerebellum usually causes damage to the part of your brain cerebellum that controls movement and coordination.

Thus, the mentioned symptoms are given above.

8 0
3 years ago
Explain musclecontraction based on neuroelectrical factors, chemical interactions, and energy sources.
USPshnik [31]

Answer:

Neuroelectrical Factor

1. Potassium ions (K+) are greater inside the muscle cell than outside, whereas sodium ions (Na+) are greater outside than inside.

2. The inside of the cell is negatively charged electrically, whereas the outside is postively charged.

3. Nerve impulse reaching a neuromuscular junction causes axon endings to release the neurotransmitter acetylcholine

4. This makes the cell membrane permeable to Na+. They rush in creating an electrical potential. K+ begin to move out to try to restore the resting potential but cannot do so because so much Na+ rushes in.

5. This causes the muscle cell to generate its own impulse called the action potential, which penetrates deep into the muscle fiber via the T tubules

6. This action potential causes the sarcoplasmic reticulum to release Ca+ into the fluids surrounding the myofibrils

7. The Ca++ stops the action of the inhibitor substances troponin and tropomyosin (which kept actin and myosin apart), thus causing the contractile process to occur.

Chemical Factor

1. Ca++ combines loosely with myosin to form activated myosin

2. Activated myosin reacts with ATP, attached to the myosin, and releases energy from the ATP to form actomyosin

3. Myosin filaments have cross bridges that now connect with the actin and pull the actin filaments in among the myosin filaments

4. A sliding process occurs: the width of the A bands remain constant but Z lines move close. By now the sodium-potassium pump kicks in to restore the resting potential. Ca++ gets reabsorbed and contraction ceases

Energy Sources ATP

1. Glycolysis: glucose to pyruvic acid, net gain eight ATP if O2 present, if no O2 then lactic acid forms with net gain of two ATP.

2. Krebs citric acid cycle: pyruvic to CO2 + H2O + 30 ATP (28 ATP + 2 GTP)

3. Phosphocreatine in muscle cells: phosphocreatine --- creatine + PO4 ---ATP

4. Free fatty acids: fatty acids --- CO2 + H2O + ATP

Explanation:

8 0
3 years ago
Explain how neurons communicate. Include a description of the action potential and how the action potential is converted into a
suter [353]

Answer:

Action potentials and chemical neurotransmitters.

Explanation:

Neurons communicate with each other via electrical events called ‘action potentials’ and chemical neurotransmitters.  At the junction between two neurons (synapse), an action potential causes neuron A to release a chemical neurotransmitter.  The neurotransmitter can either help (excite) or hinder (inhibit) neuron B from firing its own action potential.

In an intact brain, the balance of hundreds of excitatory and inhibitory inputs to a neuron determines whether an action potential will result.  Neurons are essentially electrical devices. There are many channels sitting in the cell membrane (the boundary between a cell’s inside and outside) that allow positive or negative ions to flow into and out of the cell.  Normally, the inside of the cell is more negative than the outside; neuroscientists say that the inside is around -70 mV with respect to the outside, or that the cell’s resting membrane potential is -70 mV.

This membrane potential isn’t static. It’s constantly going up and down, depending mostly on the inputs coming from the axons of other neurons. Some inputs make the neuron’s membrane potential become more positive (or less negative, e.g. from -70 mV to -65 mV), and others do the opposite.

These are respectively termed excitatory and inhibitory inputs, as they promote or inhibit the generation of action potentials (the reason some inputs are excitatory and others inhibitory is that different types of neuron release different neurotransmitters; the neurotransmitter used by a neuron determines its effect).

Action potentials are the fundamental units of communication between neurons and occur when the sum total of all of the excitatory and inhibitory inputs makes the neuron’s membrane potential reach around -50 mV (see diagram), a value called the action potential threshold.  Neuroscientists often refer to action potentials as ‘spikes’, or say a neuron has ‘fired a spike’ or ‘spiked’. The term is a reference to the shape of an action potential as recorded using sensitive electrical equipment.

Neurons talk to each other across synapses. When an action potential reaches the presynaptic terminal, it causes neurotransmitter to be released from the neuron into the synaptic cleft, a 20–40nm gap between the presynaptic axon terminal and the postsynaptic dendrite (often a spine).

After travelling across the synaptic cleft, the transmitter will attach to neurotransmitter receptors on the postsynaptic side, and depending on the neurotransmitter released (which is dependent on the type of neuron releasing it), particular positive (e.g. Na+, K+, Ca+) or negative ions (e.g. Cl-) will travel through channels that span the membrane.

Synapses can be thought of as converting an electrical signal (the action potential) into a chemical signal in the form of neurotransmitter release, and then, upon binding of the transmitter to the postsynaptic receptor, switching the signal back again into an electrical form, as charged ions flow into or out of the postsynaptic neuron.

4 0
4 years ago
Question #10<br> Label the organelles in this image:<br> D<br> A<br> E<br> B<br> F<br> С<br> G
otez555 [7]

Answer:

A Golgi Apparatus

B Ribosomes

C Centrioles

D Lysosome

E Endoplasmic Reticulum

F Mitochondria

G Vacuole

Explanation:

7 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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