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So as you can see it is the official one...
1. Acetylcholine is a neurotransmitter that is always excitatory and also lets Na+ into the postsynaptic thread? So does that mean neuron cell to neuron cell synapses would be the same as neuromuscular junctions or at least similar in some cases?
2. How does temporal summation and spatial summation work? I partially understood spatial summation, but I didn't understand temporal summation.
3. Monosynaptic reflex arc is made up of only 2 neurons and 1 synapse? The only examples in my book had a sensory neuron that ran through the spinal cord and ran through an interneuron (that was in the spinal cord). What is an example of one and how does it work?
4. So if Na+ channels are left open then Na will be in the cell and out of the cell equally, but the potassium channel is closed and the sodium potassium pump is still running. That would force all of the Potassium into the cell to be very positive right? Different scenario: And if the potassium channels were open and sodium ones are closed then the pump would cause all the sodium out of the cell. Would the cell reach -70 or would the sodium come back into the cell to stabalize the negative charge? This is only a hypothetical situation.
5. Nodes of Ranvier, I know they allow us to use less ATP on the pumps by minimizing the area, but how does that work out? Wouldn't the areas that are myelinated also need to repolarized, hence using the same amount of ATP?
6. Spinal cord controls our primitive processes? All of them?
So. That took a while to write.
Thanks in advance for your help
1. Acetylcholine is a neurotransmitter that is always excitatory and also lets Na+ into the postsynaptic thread? So does that mean neuron cell to neuron cell synapses would be the same as neuromuscular junctions or at least similar in some cases?
2. How does temporal summation and spatial summation work? I partially understood spatial summation, but I didn't understand temporal summation.
3. Monosynaptic reflex arc is made up of only 2 neurons and 1 synapse? The only examples in my book had a sensory neuron that ran through the spinal cord and ran through an interneuron (that was in the spinal cord). What is an example of one and how does it work?
4. So if Na+ channels are left open then Na will be in the cell and out of the cell equally, but the potassium channel is closed and the sodium potassium pump is still running. That would force all of the Potassium into the cell to be very positive right? Different scenario: And if the potassium channels were open and sodium ones are closed then the pump would cause all the sodium out of the cell. Would the cell reach -70 or would the sodium come back into the cell to stabalize the negative charge? This is only a hypothetical situation.
5. Nodes of Ranvier, I know they allow us to use less ATP on the pumps by minimizing the area, but how does that work out? Wouldn't the areas that are myelinated also need to repolarized, hence using the same amount of ATP?
6. Spinal cord controls our primitive processes? All of them?
So. That took a while to write.
Thanks in advance for your help