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Title: Nerves Tissue
Description: A diagram that shows facts of nerve tissues studies in Histology

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3 Layers of Cerebellum:
1
...
Purkinje Fibers
3
...
Temporal Lobe
2
...
Parietal Lobe
4
...
form & sizes
• in cross section of spinal cord- GM seen in the centre
(form H-shape)
• in [horizontal bar of H-shape]- is the central canal (remnant of
the lumen of the embryonic neural tube)
•Central canal- lined w ependymal cells

•main component - myelinated
axons & oligodendrocytes
• NO neural cell bodies
• in [cerebral & cerebellar cortex] MORE WHITE MATTER in the
central
•in {spinal cord], white matter
located in the peripheral
(surrounds the

NERVES
TISSUE

37

• Usually short & branches out
• receives many synapses - main reception
& processing site of neutron
• most nerve cell have several dendrites increases receptive area of neuron
• its size not maintain (unlike axons)thinner when branches out

Dendrites

•leg of grey matter H-shape formation is called anterior
horns (contain motor neuron)
•Posterior arm of H-shape (posterior
horns)- receives sensory fibre from
neutrons in spinal ganglia
(PNS)

Epimeuron - whole nerve bundle
Perineuron - smaller bundles of nerve
fibres
Endoneuron - individual axons

Additional

White matter

Nucleus
Neurofilament
Perikaryon
[N2
...
g motor neurones

NEURONS

Oligodendrocytes & Schwann Cells

• low columnar
epithelial cells lining
ventricles of the brain
& central canal of
spinal cord
• some location,
ciliated - facilitate
movement
of
cerebrospinal fluid

Lipofuscin

Mitochondria

• both produce myelin but in diff
...


• Anterogade flow has 3 speeds:
• slow - transports protein & actin filaments
• intermediate - transport mitochondria
• fast - transport neurotransmitters needed during synaptic communication
• RETROGRADE FLOW - transport material taken up by endocytosis during
synaptic transmission

Pseudounipolar
•1 process close to cell body

Function

Motor Neurons





Efferent
Control effector organ
Carry impulse away from CNS
Carry impulses to effectors

Sensory Neurons
• Afferent
• Carry impulse to CNS from
environment or within body

Interneurons
• link neurons to each other

Synaptic Communication

•contain neural bodies, dendrites &
initial unmyelinated portion of axon & glial
cells [located on the surface of cerebral &
cerebellar cortex]

3 Layer of CT surround NT


Title: Nerves Tissue
Description: A diagram that shows facts of nerve tissues studies in Histology