This week we finished talking about the Autonomic nervous system or ANS and then went into our special senses. As you may know our special senses includes: taste, smell, sight, and hearing. We focused on learning the eye this week. The eye is an amazing sense, without it we would not be able to see all the wonderful things around us. The eye consist of the eyelashes, pupil, iris, lateral and medial commissure. Let's break this down a little. The eyelashes have glands that coats the lashes to keep the eyelashes from sticking and keeping dirt from coming into the eye. The pupil looks black but it is actually a hole. When your pupils constrict, this allows less light to enter the eye and when your pupils dilate, more light enters. There are three layers to the eye, including: the retina (inner layer), choroid, and the sclera (outer layer).
Cataracts is a problem people tend to have as they get older. Cataracts is caused when the fibers in the eye start to harden and the protein that usually helps to repair the eye has a hard time getting in the eye to do this. This results in a lens that becomes cloudy and hard to see through.
Friday, February 27, 2009
Saturday, February 14, 2009
Week 5
This week we went over the cranial nerves and how the autonomic nervous system is broken down into the parasympathetic and the sympathetic. There are 12 cranial nerves and each have its own function.
Cranial Nerves:
1. Olfactory is for smell and is a sensory nerve
2. Optic is for vision and is also a sensory nerve
3. Ocukomotor controls eye movement and pupil constriction. This is a mixed nerve.
4. Trochlear also controls eye movement
5. Trigeminal controls the face, teeth, and chewing
6. abducens controls eye movement and is a motor nerve.
7. facial nerve controls pressure and facial expression.
8. Vestubulo-cochlear controls hearing and balence
9. Glosso=pharyngeal, containing swallowing muscles
10. Vagus controls sensation from ear canal, diaphargm, and chest
11. axxessory contains muscles of palate, neck, and some shoulder muscles
12. Hypoglossal controls tongue movement.
Next week we have break. I will take this time and start preparing for our next class.
Cranial Nerves:
1. Olfactory is for smell and is a sensory nerve
2. Optic is for vision and is also a sensory nerve
3. Ocukomotor controls eye movement and pupil constriction. This is a mixed nerve.
4. Trochlear also controls eye movement
5. Trigeminal controls the face, teeth, and chewing
6. abducens controls eye movement and is a motor nerve.
7. facial nerve controls pressure and facial expression.
8. Vestubulo-cochlear controls hearing and balence
9. Glosso=pharyngeal, containing swallowing muscles
10. Vagus controls sensation from ear canal, diaphargm, and chest
11. axxessory contains muscles of palate, neck, and some shoulder muscles
12. Hypoglossal controls tongue movement.
Next week we have break. I will take this time and start preparing for our next class.
Saturday, February 7, 2009
Week 4
This week we reviewed mostly on the first meeting over the circle of Willis and CSF circulation. Then the next class we had a different professor. It's funny how you get so used to one professor all the time, when another one comes along, how different they teach. Anyway, we covered the peripheral nervous system. This is divided into somatic and autonomic divisions. The somatic division regulates voluntary skeletal muscle. The autonomic division deals with the glands and smooth muscle. Then we went over the cranial nerves There are twelve pairs of nerves: olfactory, optic, oculomotor, trochlear, trigeminal, abducens, facial, vestibulo-cochlear, glosso-pharyngeal, vagus, accessory, and hypoglossal. They each have there own functions.
This relates to everyday living for people who have a disorder or disease relating to the nervous system. For example, someone who has Parkinson's disease or Paralysis.
This relates to everyday living for people who have a disorder or disease relating to the nervous system. For example, someone who has Parkinson's disease or Paralysis.
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