Neuron Brain

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Neurons in the Brain
The neuron is an incredible cell that sends messages and signals all over the body. Without them, we could do nothing. The Neuron was thought to be many different things throughout history, but it was in the 1950’s that the beginning of our modern day ideas and sights of the neurons.
Neurons work all through the body through the Nervous System sends and receives signals to and from all over the body, detects changes, and in regards to “Grew Crew”, the function is response. The Nervous System consists of the Brain and Spinal Cord, which carry messages sent through electrical and chemical signals transmitted by neurons. The Nervous System consists of the brain and spinal cord, which runs down the back, intertwined with the
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The Neural Membrane servers to protect the Nucleus and Cytoplasm. It is shaped around the neuron, serving as a coating around the whole thing. “The Neural Membrane serves as a barrier to enclose the cytoplasm inside the neuron, and to exclude certain substances that float in the fluid that bathes the neuron” (Johnson 3). The Cytoplasm protects the Nucleus and keeps it in place. It is placed inside the membrane. The Nucleus is a sphere inside the membrane in the widest part of the Neuron and produces all the necessary chemicals and proteins to regulate and keep the neuron functioning. Dendrites produce chemicals for other parts of the neuron, and stores energy that is used to send messages to other neurons, as well as being the receiving end of messages. They branch out of the nucleus and Cytoplasm in a tree-shaped form. The Axon a long skinny part of the neuron that branches out of the Nucleus and Dendrites that actually sends information (Johnson 7). It works hand in hand with the Myelin, which kind of look like a hot dog bun, if you will, that an off the Axon, and increases the speed at which the impulses move. And the Nerve Ending is the sensory ending at which we get feeling and senses. It reaches out of the other side of the Axon and branches out like a smaller version of the dendrites in a tree shape with little spheres on …show more content…
Contrary to popular belief, migraines are not “just a bad headache”. According to the National Migraine Society, they are an extremely incapacitating pain in the head. Migraines are thought to be a neural dysfunction, though scientists and researchers have no definitive proof. The symptoms vary person to person, but some of the common symptoms include an intense throbbing pain in the head, extreme sensitivity to light, sound, and touch, nausea, vomiting, dizziness, and tingling or numbness in the extremities or face. Migraines can be identified by reviewing family history (it can be hereditary), looking at the predominate symptoms, analyzing symptoms, eliminating other possible causes for headaches, and conducting medical tests. I can testify that migraines are nothing to be taken lightly. My mother suffers from incapacitating headaches herself. There have been days where I come home from school and all the shades in our house are closed at three o’clock in the afternoon and my mother has been laying in bed because it simply to hurts too much to do