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Nervous impulses
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Electrochemical stimuli that travel from cell to cell as they send information from one area of the body to another
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Neurons
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Cells that transmit impulses; identified as either afferent or efferent depending on the direction they travel
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Neuroglia
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Cells that support neurons and bind them to other neurons or other tissues of the body; provide a variety of activities essential to the proper functioning of neurons
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Afferent
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Carry or move inward or toward a central structure; refers to certain arteries, veins, lymphatic vessels, and nerves
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Blood-brain barrier
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Protective mechanism that blocks specific substances found in the blood-stream from entering delicate brain tissue
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Central nervous system (CNS)
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Network of nervous tissue found in the brain and spinal cord
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Efferent
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Carry or move away from a central structure; refers to certain arteries, veins, lymphatic vessels, and nerves
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Nerve fiber
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Projection of a neuron, especially the axon that transmits impulses
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Neurilemma
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Additional sheath external to myelin that is formed by Schwann cells and found only on axons in the peripheral nervous system
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Ventricle
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Chamber or cavity of an organ that receives or holds a fluid
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What are the three main structures of the neuron?
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1. cell body2. axon3. dendrites
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Cell Body
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The enlarged structure of the neuron that contains the nucleus of the cell and various organelles
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Dendrites
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--branching cytoplasmic projections that carry impulses TO the cell body--resemble tiny branches on a tree, providing additional surface area for receiving impulses from other neurons
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Axons
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--branching cytoplasmic projections that carry impulses FROM the cell body--long, single projections ranging from a few millimeters to more than a meter in length--transmit impulses to dendrites of other neurons as well as muscles and glands
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Which axons posses a white, lipoid covering called a myelin sheath?
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Axons in the peripheral nervous system and the central nervous system
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