front 1 1) Which of the following is not a function of the nervous system?
| back 1 D) direct long-term functions, such as growth |
front 2 2) The ________ nervous system is composed of the brain and spinal cord.
| back 2
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front 3 3) The ________ nervous system controls the skeletal muscles.
| back 3
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front 4 4) The part of the peripheral nervous system that carries sensory information to the CNS is designated
| back 4
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front 5 5) The efferent division of the peripheral nervous system innervates ________ cells.
E) All of the answers are correct | back 5 E) All of the answers are correct |
front 6 6) The axoplasm of the axon contains which of the following?
| back 6 E) All of the answers are correct |
front 7 7) Which of the following is not a recognized structural classification for neurons?
| back 7 D) pseudopolar |
front 8 8) The most abundant class of neuron in the central nervous system is
| back 8 C) multipolar |
front 9 9) The cytoplasm that surrounds the nucleus of a neuron is called the
| back 9 E) perikaryon |
front 10 10) Clusters of RER and free ribosomes in neurons are called
| back 10 D) Nissl bodies |
front 11 11) The axon is connected to the soma at the
E) synapse. | back 11 D) axon hillock |
front 12 12) Branches that may occur along an axon are called
| back 12 C) collaterals |
front 13 13) Axons terminate in a series of fine extensions known as
| back 13 A) telodendria. |
front 14 14) Neurotransmitters ready for release are stored in synaptic
| back 14 C) vesicles |
front 15 15) The site of intercellular communication between a neuron and another cell is the
| back 15 E) synapse |
front 16 16) The rabies virus travels to the CNS via
E) cerebrospinal fluid | back 16 B) retrograde axoplasmic transport |
front 17 17) Neurons that are rare, small, and lack features that distinguish dendrites from axons are called
| back 17 A) anaxonic. |
front 18 18) Neurons in which dendritic and axonal processes are continuous and the soma lies off to one side are called
| back 18 B) unipolar |
front 19 19) Neurons that have one axon and one dendrite, with the soma in between, are called
E) multipolar | back 19 C) bipolar. |
front 20 20) Neurons that have several dendrites and a single axon are called
| back 20 E) multipolar. |
front 21 21) Sensory neurons of the PNS are
E) tripolar. | back 21 A) unipolar |
front 22 22) Which of the following activities or sensations is/are not monitored by interoceptors?
E) urinary activities | back 22 A) sight |
front 23 23) ________ neurons are small and have no anatomical features that distinguish dendrites from axons.
| back 23 B) Anaxonic |
front 24 24) ________ neurons are short, with a cell body between dendrite and axon, and occur in special sense organs.
| back 24 D) Bipolar |
front 25 25) In a(n) ________ neuron, the dendrites and axon are continuous or fused.
| back 25 C) unipolar |
front 26 26) ________ neurons are the most common structural class in the CNS.
E) Sensory | back 26 A) Multipolar |
front 27 27) ________ neurons form the afferent division of the PNS.
| back 27 B) Sensory |
front 28 28) ________ are the most numerous type of neuron in the CNS.
| back 28 E) Interneurons |
front 29 29) Most CNS neurons lack centrioles. This observation explains
| back 29 B) why CNS neurons cannot divide to regenerate damaged tissue |
front 30 30) How does blocking retrograde axoplasmic transport in an axon affect the activity of a neuron?
| back 30 D) The soma becomes unable to respond to changes in the distal end of the axon |
front 31 39) Deteriorating changes in the distal segment of an axon as a result of a break between it and the soma is called ________ degeneration.
| back 31 D) Wallerian |
front 32 40) Which of the following is not a function of the neuroglia?
| back 32 B) memory |
front 33 41) Which of the following is a type of glial cell found in the peripheral nervous system?
| back 33 B) satellite cells |
front 34 42) The largest and most numerous of the glial cells in the central nervous system are the
E) ependymal cells | back 34 A) astrocytes. |
front 35 43) Functions of astrocytes include all of the following except
| back 35 B) conducting action potentials. |
front 36 44) ________ account for roughly half of the volume of the nervous system.
| back 36 C) Neuroglia |
front 37 45) The function of the astrocytes in the CNS includes which of the following?
| back 37 E) All of the answers are correct |
front 38 46) The neuroglial cells that participate in maintaining the blood-brain barrier are the
| back 38 A) astrocytes |
front 39 47) The myelin sheath that covers many CNS axons is formed by
| back 39 C) oligodendrocytes |
front 40 48) ________ line the brain ventricles and spinal canal.
| back 40 E) Ependymal cells |
front 41 49) Small, wandering cells that engulf cell debris and pathogens in the CNS are called
| back 41 D) microglia |
front 42 50) The neurilemma of axons in the peripheral nervous system is formed by
| back 42 E) Schwann cells. |
front 43 51) Glial cells that surround the neurons in ganglia are
| back 43 B) satellite cells |
front 44 52) Many medications introduced into the bloodstream cannot directly affect the neurons of the CNS because
E) astrocytes form a capsule around neurons. | back 44 B) the endothelium of CNS capillaries forms a blood-brain barrier. |
front 45 53) Extensive damage to oligodendrocytes in the CNS could result in
E) loss of sensation and motor control | back 45 E) loss of sensation and motor control |
front 46 54) Damage to ependymal cells would most likely affect the
E) transport of neurotransmitters within axons | back 46 B) formation of cerebrospinal fluid |
front 47 55) When pressure is applied to neural tissue, all of the following effects are possible except
E) neurons are triggered to divide | back 47 E) neurons are triggered to divide |
front 48 56) In the peripheral nervous system, Schwann cells participate in the repair of damaged nerves by
E) producing more satellite cells that fuse to form new axons. | back 48 C) forming a cellular cord that directs axonal regrowth. |
front 49 57) After a stroke, what type of glial cell accumulates within the affected brain region?
| back 49 D) microglia |
front 50 58) Which of the following is not true regarding the establishment of a neuron's resting potential? A) Chemical and electrical forces both favor sodium ions entering the cell. B) Electrical forces push sodium ions into the cell. C) The chemical gradient for potassium ions tends to drive them out of the cell. D) Ion pumps in the plasma membrane eject sodium ions as fast as they cross the membrane. E) Resting membrane permeability to Na+ is very low. | back 50 B) Electrical forces push sodium ions into the cell. |
front 51 59) At the normal resting potential of a typical neuron, its sodium-potassium exchange pump transports A) 1 intracellular sodium ion for 2 extracellular potassium ions. B) 2 intracellular sodium ions for 1 extracellular potassium ion. C) 3 intracellular sodium ions for 1 extracellular potassium ion. D) 3 intracellular sodium ions for 2 extracellular potassium ions. E) 3 extracellular sodium ions for 2 intracellular potassium ions. | back 51 D) 3 intracellular sodium ions for 2 extracellular potassium ions. |
front 52 60) Ion channels that are always open are called ________ channels.
| back 52 C) leak |
front 53 61) Opening of sodium channels in the axon membrane causes
| back 53 A) depolarization |
front 54 62) Voltage-gated channels are present
| back 54 C) in the membrane that covers axons |
front 55 63) The sodium-potassium ion exchange pump
| back 55 D) moves sodium and potassium opposite to the direction of their electrochemical gradients |
front 56 64) Integral membrane proteins that connect electrical synapses are called
| back 56 A) connexons |
front 57 65) The equilibrium potential for potassium ion occurs at approximately
| back 57 A) -90 mV |
front 58 66) ________ open or close in response to binding specific molecules. A) Leak channels B) Activated channels C) Chemically gated channels D) Voltage-gated channels E) Voltage-gated and chemically gated channels | back 58 C) Chemically gated channels |
front 59 67) ________ channels open or close in response to physical distortion of the membrane surface.
| back 59 D) Mechanically gated |
front 60 68) Any stimulus that opens a ________ ion channel will produce a graded potential. A) voltage-gated B) chemically gated C) sodium D) mechanically gated E) All of the answers are correct | back 60 E) All of the answers are correct |
front 61 69) If the permeability of a resting axon to sodium ion increases,
E) inward movement of sodium will increase and the membrane will depolarize | back 61 E) inward movement of sodium will increase and the membrane will depolarize |
front 62 70) Which of the following is not involved in creating the resting potential of a neuron? A) diffusion of potassium ions out of the cell B) diffusion of sodium ions into the cell C) membrane permeability for sodium ions greater than potassium ions D) membrane permeability for potassium ions greater than sodium ions E) The interior of the plasma membrane has an excess of negative charges. | back 62 C) membrane permeability for sodium ions greater than potassium ions |
front 63 71) If the sodium-potassium pumps in the plasma membrane fail to function, all of the following occur except
| back 63 A) the intracellular concentration of potassium ions will increase |
front 64 72) Graded potentials
E) cause repolarization | back 64 C) may be either a depolarization or a hyperpolarization. |
front 65 73) When potassium channels open and the ions diffuse through the membrane,
E) the membrane will depolarize to threshold | back 65 B) the inside of the membrane will become more negative |
front 66 74) Ions can move across the plasma membrane in which of the following ways?
E) All of the answers are correct | back 66 E) All of the answers are correct |
front 67 75) Raising the potassium ion concentration in the extracellular fluid surrounding a nerve cell will have what effect?
| back 67 E) both hyperpolarize it and decrease the magnitude of the potassium equilibrium potential |
front 68 76) Voltage-gated sodium channels have both an activation gate and a(n) ________ gate.
| back 68 A) inactivation |
front 69 77) If acetylcholine (ACh) causes inhibition of a postsynaptic neuron, to what type of membrane channel did the ACh bind?
| back 69 D) chemically-regulated potassium channel |
front 70 78) A stimulus that changes a postsynaptic neuron's membrane from resting potential to -85 mV is a(n) ________ stimulus.
| back 70 E) inhibitory |
front 71 79) If the axolemma becomes more permeable to potassium ion,
| back 71 B) a stronger stimulus will be required to cause an action potential. |
front 72 80) The following are the main steps in the generation of an action potential.
What is the proper sequence of these events?
| back 72 B) 4, 6, 7, 1, 2, 3, 5 |
front 73 81) The all-or-none principle states that
E) only motor stimuli can activate action potentials | back 73
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front 74 82) The same ________ can have different effects depending on the properties of the ________.
| back 74 A) neurotransmitter; receptor |
front 75 83) Which of the following statements about the action potential is false?
| back 75 A) The rapid depolarization phase is caused by the entry of potassium ions |
front 76 84) How would the absolute refractory period be affected if voltage-regulated sodium channels failed to inactivate?
| back 76 A) It would last indefinitely |
front 77 85) During repolarization of a neuron
| back 77 B) potassium ions move out of the cell |
front 78 86) How would a chemical that prevents the opening of voltage-regulated Na+ channels affect the function of a neuron?
E) The neuron will only be capable of producing graded potentials. | back 78 E) The neuron will only be capable of producing graded potentials |
front 79 87) A threshold stimulus is the
E) electrical current that crosses the synaptic cleft | back 79 A) depolarization necessary to cause an action potential |
front 80 88) Which of the following is true about threshold for an action potential?
E) Threshold for a typical neuron is approximately -30 mV | back 80 A) It is more positive than the resting potentia |
front 81 89) Puffer fish poison blocks voltage-gated sodium channels like a cork. What effect would this neurotoxin have on the function of neurons?
| back 81 D) The axon would be unable to generate action potentials |
front 82 99) Rapid impulse conduction from "node" to "node" is called
| back 82 B) saltatory propagation |
front 83 100) Which of the following does not influence the time necessary for a nerve impulse to be transmitted?
| back 83 E) whether or not the impulse begins in the CNS |
front 84 101) Which of the following types of nerve fiber possesses the fastest speed of impulse propagation?
| back 84 A) type A |
front 85 102) Type ________ fibers have the largest diameter axons.
| back 85 C) A |
front 86 103) Sensory information from skeletal muscles travels over ________ fibers.
| back 86 A) type A |
front 87 104) In which of the following would the rate of impulse conduction be the greatest?
E) It would be the same in all because of the all-or-none principle | back 87 A) a myelinated fiber of 10-µm diameter |
front 88 105) A neuron that receives neurotransmitter from another neuron is called
E) the postsynaptic neuron | back 88 E) the postsynaptic neuron |
front 89 106) Which type of synapse is most common in the nervous system?
| back 89 A) chemical |
front 90 107) The ion that triggers the release of acetylcholine into the synaptic cleft is
| back 90 C) calcium |
front 91 108) Cholinergic synapses release the neurotransmitter
| back 91 D) acetylcholine |
front 92 109) The following are the steps involved in transmission at a cholinergic synapse. What is the correct sequence for these events?
| back 92 B) 4, 2, 6, 7, 1, 8, 3, 5 |
front 93 110) If the chemically gated sodium channels in the postsynaptic membrane were completely blocked,
| back 93 A) synaptic transmission would fail |
front 94 111) The effect that a neurotransmitter has on the postsynaptic membrane depends on the
E) All of the answers are correct | back 94 E) All of the answers are correct |
front 95 112) When cholinergic receptors are stimulated,
E) norepinephrine deactivates acetylcholine | back 95 A) sodium ions enter the postsynaptic neuron. |
front 96 113) If the axon terminal of a motor neuron suddenly became permeable to calcium ion,
| back 96 B) the motor end plate will be depolarized. |
front 97 114) Each of the following is an example of a synapse between neurons and effector cells except the junction between a neuron and a(n)
| back 97 E) nerve cell |
front 98 115) What triggers the release of acetylcholine from a synaptic terminal?
| back 98 E) diffusion of calcium ions into the synaptic terminal |
front 99 116) Adrenergic synapses release the neurotransmitter
| back 99 B) norepinephrine |
front 100 117) Which of the following is the most important excitatory neurotransmitter in the brain that is important in learning and memory?
E) glycine | back 100 A) glutamate |
front 101 118) Which of the following is not a possible drug effect on synaptic function?
| back 101 E) change the type of receptor found in the postsynaptic membrane |
front 102 119) Opioids relieve pain by blocking the release of
| back 102 B) substance P. |
front 103 120) Which of the following is a recognized class of opioid neuromodulators?
E) All of the answers are correct | back 103 E) All of the answers are correct |
front 104 121) Active neurons need ATP to support which of the following?
| back 104 E) All of the answers are correct. |
front 105 122) After acetylcholinesterase acts, the synaptic terminal
E) pinches off and a new terminal grows | back 105 C) reabsorbs the choline |
front 106 123) A postsynaptic neuron will have an excitatory postsynaptic potential (EPSP) when
E) more potassium ions than usual diffuse out of the neuron | back 106 C) chemically regulated sodium channels are open and sodium is diffusing into the cell. |
front 107 124) Presynaptic facilitation by serotonin is caused by
| back 107 D) calcium channels in the presynaptic membrane remaining open longer. |
front 108 125) The site in the neuron where EPSPs and IPSPs are integrated is the
| back 108 C) axon hillock |
front 109 126) EPSPs (excitatory postsynaptic potentials) occur when
| back 109 D) extra sodium ions enter a cell |
front 110 127) IPSPs (inhibitory postsynaptic potentials)
E) block the efflux of calcium ions. | back 110 B) are local hyperpolarizations |
front 111 128) When a second EPSP (excitatory postsynaptic potential) arrives at a single synapse before the effects of the first have disappeared, what occurs?
| back 111 B) temporal summation |
front 112 129) Summation that results from the cumulative effect of multiple synapses at multiple places on the neuron is designated
| back 112 A) spatial summation |
front 113 1) The nervous tissue outside of the central nervous system composes the ________ nervous system.
| back 113 B) peripheral |
front 114 2) The ________ division of the peripheral nervous system brings sensory information to the central nervous system.
| back 114 D) afferent |
front 115 3) The ________ division of the nervous system carries motor commands to muscles and glands.
| back 115 E) efferent |
front 116 4) The ________ nervous system provides involuntary regulation of smooth muscle, cardiac muscle, and glandular activity.
| back 116 C) autonomic |
front 117 5) ________ carry motor information to peripheral effectors.
E) Interneurons | back 117 B) Efferent neurons |
front 118 6) ________ nerves are nerves that connect to the spinal cord.
| back 118 A) Spinal |
front 119 7) ________ nerves are nerves that connect to the brain.
| back 119 D) Cranial |
front 120 8) ________ monitor the position of skeletal muscles and joints
| back 120 A) Proprioceptors |
front 121 9) ________ carry sensory information to the CNS.
| back 121 D) Afferent neurons |
front 122 10) ________ provide information about the external environment.
E) Proprioceptors | back 122 D) Exteroceptors |
front 123 11) ________ monitor the digestive, respiratory, cardiovascular, urinary, and reproductive systems. A) Spinal nerves B) Unipolar neurons C) Internoceptors D) Exteroceptors E) Proprioceptors | back 123 C) Internoceptors |
front 124 12) The plasma membrane of an axon is called the
| back 124 E) axolemma |
front 125 13) The basic functional unit of the nervous system is the
E) receptor | back 125 A) neuron |
front 126 14) The most common neuron of the nervous system is the
E) microglial cell. | back 126 A) interneuron. |
front 127 15) Most neurons lack ________ and so are permanently blocked from undergoing cell division.
| back 127 D) centrioles |
front 128 16) Products from the soma of a neuron are transported to the synaptic terminals by ________ transport.
| back 128 A) anterograde |
front 129 17) A change in the conditions in the synaptic terminal can influence the soma as a result of ________ transport.
| back 129 B) retrograde |
front 130 18) Neuron cell bodies in the PNS are clustered together in masses called
E) ganglia | back 130 E) ganglia |
front 131 19) The tiny gaps between adjacent Schwann cells are called
E) vesicles. | back 131 B) nodes of Ranvier |
front 132 20) Regions of the CNS with an abundance of myelinated axons constitute the ________ matter.
| back 132 B) white |
front 133 21) Regions of the CNS where neuron cell bodies dominate constitute the ________ matter.
| back 133 B) gray |
front 134 22) A movement of charges in response to a potential difference is called
E) electricity | back 134 A) current |
front 135 23) The separation of positive and negative charges across the membrane creates a ________ difference, or voltage.
| back 135 E) potential |
front 136 24) The sum of the electrical and chemical forces acting on an ion is known as its
E) summation difference | back 136 C) electrochemical gradient |
front 137 25) A shift of the resting transmembrane potential toward 0 mV is called
| back 137 B) depolarization |
front 138 26) The minimum stimulus required to trigger an action potential is known as the
| back 138 A) threshold |
front 139 27) The ________ principle states that the size and speed of the action potential are independent of the stimulus strength.
E) potential | back 139 B) all-or-none |
front 140 28) The period during which an excitable membrane cannot respond to further stimulation is the ________ period.
| back 140 B) absolute refractory |
front 141 29) The period during which an excitable membrane can respond again, but only if the stimulus is greater than the threshold stimulus, is the ________ period.
| back 141 A) relative refractory |
front 142 30) The presence of ________ dramatically increases the speed at which an action potential moves along an axon.
| back 142 E) myelin |
front 143 31) The sensory loss and muscle weakness associated with multiple sclerosis are a consequence of
E) too few nodes of Ranvier | back 143 B) demyelination |
front 144 32) At a(n) ________ synapse, a neurotransmitter is released to stimulate the postsynaptic membrane.
| back 144 C) chemical |
front 145 33) In a(n) ________ synapse, current flows directly between cells.
| back 145 A) electrical |
front 146 34) Compounds that alter the rate of neurotransmitter release by the presynaptic neuron or change the postsynaptic cell's response to neurotransmitters are called
| back 146 D) neuromodulators |
front 147 35) The buildup of depolarization when EPSPs arrive in rapid succession is called ________ summation.
E) perforal | back 147 A) temporal |
front 148 36) The buildup of depolarization when EPSPs arrive at several places on the neuron is called ________ summation.
| back 148 B) spatial |