Nervous-Iii
Number of nervous-iii flashcards: 76
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Number of nervous-iii flashcards studied: 0
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Start Flashcard Study Return to Medical Terminology homepageMedical Term | Description |
accessory nerve | Either of two cranial nerves which are important for swallowing, speech and some head and shoulder movements. |
adjustment disorders | Maladaptive reactions to a stressful event. |
adrenergic fibers | Nerve fibers liberating catecholamines at a synapse after an impulse. |
adrenergic neurons | Neurons whose primary neurotransmitter is epinephrine. |
affect | The emotional reaction to an experience or thought. |
agraphia | Inability to write due to a cerebral injury or less commonly, due to emotional factors. |
akinetic mutism | A syndrome characterized by a silent and inert state without voluntary motor activity despite alertness. |
alprazolam | A compound used to treat anxiety. |
amphetamine | A powerful group of drugs that stimulate the central nervous system. Amphetamines reduce feelings of fatigue and increase alertness. |
analgesics | A compound that relieves pain. |
anesthesiology | A specialty concerned with the study of anesthetics and anesthesia. |
anesthetics | Agents that are capable of inducing a total or partial loss of sensation, especially tactile sensation and pain. They may act generally or locally. |
anhedonia | Inability to experience happiness or pleasure. It is a symptom of many psychotic disorders. |
anomia | An inability to name people and objects that are correctly comprehended. |
antidromic | Conducting nerve impulses in a direction opposite from normal. |
antipsychotic | An agent used to control severe mental disorders. |
antisocial | A personality disorder characterized by a disregard for individual rights or laws. |
apraxia | Disorders characterized by the inability to make skilled, purposeful movements due to a cerebral disease. |
aquaphobia | An irrational fear of water. |
arachnoid | A delicate membrane covering the brain and spinal cord. It lies between the pia mater and the dura mater. |
arachnoiditis | Acute or chronic inflammation of the arachnoid membrane, resulting in pain and neurological abnormalities. |
astrocyte | A large, star shaped cell. Found throughout the central nervous system. |
astrocytoma | A type of brain tumor. |
autonomic | The ability to function without external influence. |
autonomic nervous system | The part of the nervous system that regulates involuntary body functions. The enteric nervous system; parasympathetic nervous system; and sympathetic nervous system taken together. |
autophagia | Biting or eating one's own flesh. |
autosuggestion | Suggestion coming from the subject himself. |
aversion therapy | A treatment that suppresses undesirable behavior by simultaneously exposing the subject to unpleasant consequences. |
axon | Nerve fiber that conduct impulses away from the neuron cell body. |
basal ganglia | Large grey masses at the base of the cerebral hemisphere. |
benzocaine | A local anesthetic applied topically. |
bipolar disorder | A major affective disorder marked by severe mood swings (manic or major depressive episodes) and a tendency to remission and recurrence. |
bonding | The emotional attachment of mother-child or individuals to pets. |
catatonia | A neuropsychiatric disorder characterized by the patient becoming mute or immobile with extreme muscular rigidity. |
cauda equina | The lower part of the spinal cord consisting of the lumbar, sacral, and coccygeal nerve roots. |
central nervous system | The main information-processing organs of the nervous system, consisting of the brain, spinal cord, and meninges. |
cerebral edema | An abnormal accumulation of fluid in brain tissue. Brain swelling. |
cerebral hemorrhage | Bleeding into one or both cerebral hemispheres. |
cerebrospinal fluid | A watery fluid that is continuously produced in the choroid plexus and circulates around the surface of the brain, the spinal cord and in the cerebral ventricles. |
comprehension | Understanding. |
conditioning | Learning that takes place when a conditioned stimulus is paired with an unconditioned stimulus. |
depersonalization | A feeling of unreality concerning the self or the environment. |
efferent pathways | The route of nerve structures carrying impulses away from a nerve center toward a peripheral site. |
eidetic | Pertaining to the ability to accurately visualize events or objects from experience. |
ependyma | A thin membrane that lines the cerebral ventricles and the central canal of the spinal cord. |
epineurium | The sheath of a peripheral nerve. |
glasgow coma scale | A scale for measuring level of consciousness, especially after craniocerebral injury |
hippocampus | A curved elevation of gray matter extending the entire length of the floor of the temporal horn of the lateral ventricle (see also temporal lobe). It has a central role in memory processes. |
interneurons | Groups or combinations of neurons between sensory and motor neurons that govern coordinated activity. |
median nerve | A major nerve of the arm, suppling sensory and motor innervation to parts of the forearm and hand. |
medulla oblongata | The lower portion of the brain stem. Medulla oblongata serves as a relay station between the brain and the spinal cord, and contains centers for regulating respiratory, vasomotor, cardiac, and reflex activities. |
meninges | The three membranes that envelop the brain and the spinal cord. |
meningioma | A relatively common neoplasm of the central nervous system. |
merkel cells | Modified epidermal cells located in the stratum basale (the innermost layer of the epidermis). They are found mostly in areas where sensory perception is acute, such as the fingertips. |
microcephaly | Abnormal smallness of the head; a congenital abnormality |
neocortex | The largest portion of the cerebral cortex, the outer surface of the cerebrum, responsible for spatial reasoning, thought, language, memory and sensory perception. |
neuritis | A general term indicating inflammation of a nerve, often marked by pain, numbness or tingling, or paralysis. |
neurocytoma | A brain tumor of undifferentiated cells of nervous origin. |
neuroretinitis | Inflammation of the optic nerve and retina. |
neurotropic | Having an affinity for the nervous system or the growth of neural tissue. |
obtund | To blunt or deaden pain. |
phantom limb | Phantom sensations that occur following the complete or partial loss of a limb. |
polyneuropathy | A disease of multiple peripheral nerves simultaneously. |
pons | The front part of the hindbrain that lies between the medulla and the midbrain ventral to the cerebellum, serving as a relay station for neural pathways. |
pudendal nerve | A nerve which originates in the sacral spinal cord (S2 to S4) and innervates the perineum, the external genitalia, the external anal sphincter and the external urethral sphincter. Can be damaged in childbirth. |
radiculopathy | Disease involving a spinal nerve root. |
reflex arc | The neural path of a reflex. |
spinal stenosis | Narrowing of the spinal canal. |
sural nerve | A branch of the tibial nerve which supplies sensory innervation to parts of the lower leg and foot. |
tectospinal | Denoting nerve fibers passing from the mesencephalic tectum to the spinal cord. |
telencephalon | The anterior subdivision of the prosencephalon which develops into the olfactory bulbs, cerebral cortex and basal ganglia. |
thermoalgesia | Abnormal pain felt when part of the body is warmed. |
titubation | Walking with a staggering or stumbling gait. |
tourette syndrome | A neuropsychological disorder appearing in childhood, marked by multiple motor and vocal tics occurring multiple times daily over a period of more than one year. |
trichotillomania | Compulsion to pull out one's hair. |
trigeminal | Pertaining to the fifth cranial nerve. |
Authors and Reviewers
Authored by Dr. Barbara A. EricksonMedically reviewed by Dr. Jonathan Keroes, MD
Last Update: 12/18/2022