The nervous system is concerned with the reception of stimuli, the nervous system is those elements within the animal organism that transmission of nerve impulses, or the activation of muscle mechanisms.The reception of stimuli is the function of special sensory cells. The conducting elements of the nervous system are cells called neurons; these may be capable of only slow and generalised activity, or they may be highly efficient and rapidly conducting units. The specific response of the neuron the nerve impulse and the capacity of the cell to be stimulated make this cell a receiving and transmitting unit capable of transferring information from one part of the body to another.
Each nerve cell consists of a central portion containing the nucleus,
known as the cell body, and one or more structures referred to as axons
and dendrites. The dendrites are rather short extensions of the cell body
and are involved in the reception of stimuli. The axon, by contrast, is
usually a single elongated extension; it is especially important in the
transmission of nerve impulses from the region of the cell body to other
cells. Although all many-celled animals have some kind of nervous system,
the complexity of its organisation varies considerably among different
animal types. In simple animals such as jellyfish, the nerve cells form
a network capable of mediating only a relatively stereotyped response.
In more complex animals, such as shellfish, insects, and spiders, the nervous
system is more complicated. The cell bodies of neurons are organised in
clusters called ganglia. These clusters are interconnected by the neuronal
processes to form a ganglionated chain. Such chains are found in all vertebrates,
in which they represent a special part of the nervous system, related especially
to the regulation of the activities of the heart, the glands, and the involuntary
muscles.Vertebrate Systems. Vertebrate animals have a bony spine and skull
in which the central part of the nervous system is housed; the peripheral
part extends throughout the remainder of the body. That part of the nervous
system located in the skull is referred to as the brain ; that found in
the spine is called the spinal cord . The brain and the spinal cord are
continuous through an opening in the base of the skull; both are also in
contact with other parts of the body through the nerves. The distinction
made between the central nervous system and the peripheral nervous system
is based on the different locations of the two intimately related parts
of a single system. Some of the processes of the cell bodies conduct sense
impressions and others conduct muscle responses, called reflexes, such
as those caused by pain .
In the skin are cells of several types called receptors; each is especially
sensitive to particular stimuli. Free nerve endings are sensitive to pain
and are directly activated. The neurons so activated send impulses into
the central nervous system and have junctions with other cells that have
axons extending back into the periphery. Impulses are carried from processes
of these cells to motor endings within the muscles . These neuromuscular
endings excite the muscles, resulting in muscular contraction and appropriate
movement. The pathway taken by the nerve impulse in mediating this simple
response is in the form of a two-neuron arc that begins and ends in the
periphery. Many of the actions of the nervous system can be explained on
the basis of such reflex arcs, which are chains of interconnected nerve
cells, stimulated at one end and capable of bringing about movement or
glandular secretion at the other.The Nerve Network. The cranial nerves
connect to the brain by passing through openings in the skull, or cranium.
Nerves associated with the spinal cord pass through openings in the vertebral
column and are called spinal nerves. Both cranial and spinal nerves consist
of large numbers of processes that convey impulses to the central nervous
system and also carry messages outward; the former processes are called
afferent, the latter are called efferent. Afferent impulses are referred
to as sensory; efferent impulses are referred to as either somatic or visceral
motor, according to what part of the body they reach. Most nerves are mixed
nerves made up of both sensory and motor elements.
The cranial and spinal nerves are paired; the number in humans are
12 and 31, respectively. Cranial nerves are distributed to the head and
neck regions of the body, with one conspicuous exception: the tenth cranial
nerve, called the vagus. In addition to supplying structures in the neck,
the vagus is distributed to structures located in the chest and abdomen.
Vision, auditory and vestibular sensation, and taste are mediated by the
second, eighth, and seventh cranial nerves, respectively. Cranial nerves
also mediate motor functions of the head, the eyes, the face, the tongue,
and the larynx, as well as the muscles that function in chewing and swallowing.
Spinal nerves, after they exit from the vertebrae, are distributed in a
bandlike fashion to various regions of the trunk and to the limbs. They
interconnect extensively, thereby forming the brachial plexus, which proceeds
to the upper extremities; and the lumbar plexus, which proceeds to the
lower limbs.Autonomic Nervous System. Among the motor fibres may be found
groups that carry impulses to viscera. These fibres are designated by the
special name of autonomic nervous system . That system consists of two
divisions, more or less antagonistic in function, that emerge from the
central nervous system at different points of origin. One division, the
sympathetic, arises from the middle portion of the spinal cord, joins the
sympathetic ganglionated chain, courses through the spinal nerves, and
is widely distributed throughout the body. The other division, the parasympathetic,
arises both above and below the sympathetic, that is, from the brain and
from the lower part of the spinal cord. These two divisions control the
functions of the respiratory, circulatory, digestive, and urogenital systems.Consideration
of disorders of the nervous system is the province of neurology; psychiatry
deals with behavioural disturbances of a functional nature. The division
between these two medical specialities cannot be sharply defined, because
neurological disorders often manifest both organic and mental symptoms.
Diseases of the nervous system include genetic malformations, poisonings,
metabolic defects, vascular disorders, inflammations, degeneration, and
tumours, and they involve either nerve cells or their supporting elements.
Vascular disorders, such as cerebral haemorrhage or other forms of stroke,
are among the most common causes of paralysis and other neuralgic complications.
Some diseases exhibit peculiar geographic and age distribution. In temperate
zones, multiple sclerosis is a common degenerative disease of the nervous
system, but it is rare in the Tropics.
The nervous system is subject to infection by a great variety of bacteria,
parasites, and viruses. For example, meningitis , or infection of the meninges
investing the brain and spinal cord, can be caused by many different agents.
On the other hand, one specific virus causes rabies . Some viruses causing
neurological ills affect only certain parts of the nervous system. For
example, the virus causing poliomyelitis commonly affects the spinal cord;
viruses causing encephalitis attack the brain.