1 - Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
Summary
Suppose a man has a tomato thrown at his head, and that he is able to take suitable evasive action. His reactions would involve changes in the activity of a very large number of cells in his body. First of all, the presence of a red object would be registered by the visual sensory cells in the eye, and these in turn would excite nerve cells leading into the brain via the optic nerve. A great deal of activity would then ensue in different varieties of nerve cell in the brain and, after a very short space of time, nerve impulses would pass from the brain to some of the muscles of the face and, indirectly, to muscles of the neck, legs and arms. The muscle cells there would themselves be excited by the nerve impulses reaching them, and would contract so as to move the body and so prevent the tomato having its intended effect. These movements would themselves produce excitation of numerous sensory endings in the muscles and joints of the body and in the organs of balance in the inner ear. The resulting impulses in sensory nerves would then cause further activity in the brain and spinal cord, possibly leading to further muscular activity.
A chain of events of this type involves the activity of a group of cell types which we can describe as ‘excitable cells’: a rather loose category which includes nerve cells, muscle cells, sensory cells and some others.
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- Information
- The Physiology of Excitable Cells , pp. 3 - 7Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1998