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Good stuff
brain
The central nervous system consists of the brain and the spinal cord. The brain is the place to which impulses flow and from which impulses originate. It is the center of everything, how we think, how we move and what we see. Each part of the brain has its own effect on our daily lives.
The cerebrum is the largest part of the brain. it consists mainly o four major lobes. The frontal lobe, the parietal lobe, the temporal lobe, and the occipital lobe.
The frontal lobe is in the front of the brain and is associated with personality, reasoning, language, and motor skills. Therefore, if the frontal lobe is damaged it may change a person's personality and morals.
The parietal lobe is located in the top of your brain. the parietal lobe is the source of your senses. If this is damaged you will likely be unable to accurately use your five senses.
The temporal lobe is in the bottom of your brain. This part of your brain is associated with interpreting things: language, memory, ect. Damage will result in speech confusion and bad memory.
The occipital lobe is located in the back of the brain. This part of your brain is associated with your visions. If this is damaged you probably will not be able to see very well.
In short the brain is responsible for movement, learning, judgement and perception. So take care of your brain because you only have one.
Brain Structures and their Functions
Cerebrum
Cerebellum
Limbic System
Brain Stem
The nervous system is your body's decision and communication center. The central nervous system (CNS) is made of the brain and the spinal cord and the peripheral nervous system (PNS) is made of nerves. Together they control every part of your daily life, from breathing and blinking to helping you memorize facts for a test. Nerves reach from your brain to your face, ears, eyes, nose, and spinal cord... and from the spinal cord to the rest of your body. Sensory nerves gather information from the environment, send that info to the spinal cord, which then speed the message to the brain. The brain then makes sense of that message and fires off a response. Motor neurons deliver the instructions from the brain to the rest of your body. The spinal cord, made of a bundle of nerves running up and down the spine, is similar to a superhighway, speeding messages to and from the brain at every second.
The brain is made of three main parts: the forebrain, midbrain, and hindbrain. The forebrain consists of the cerebrum, thalamus, and hypothalamus (part of the limbic system). The midbrain consists of the tectum and tegmentum. The hindbrain is made of the cerebellum, pons and medulla. Often the midbrain, pons, and medulla are referred to together as the brainstem.
The Cerebrum: The cerebrum or cortex is the largest part of the human brain, associated with higher brain function such as thought and action. The cerebral cortex is divided into four sections, called "lobes": the frontal lobe, parietal lobe, occipital lobe, and temporal lobe. Here is a visual representation of the cortex:
What do each of these lobes do?
Frontal Lobe- associated with reasoning, planning, parts of speech, movement, emotions, and problem solving
Parietal Lobe- associated with movement, orientation, recognition, perception of stimuli
Occipital Lobe- associated with visual processing
Temporal Lobe- associated with perception and recognition of auditory stimuli, memory, and speech
Note that the cerebral cortex is highly wrinkled. Essentially this makes the brain more efficient, because it can increase the surface area of the brain and the amount of neurons within it. We will discuss the relevance of the degree of cortical folding (or gyrencephalization) later. (Go here for more information about cortical folding)
A deep furrow divides the cerebrum into two halves, known as the left and right hemispheres. The two hemispheres look mostly symmetrical yet it has been shown that each side functions slightly different than the other. Sometimes the right hemisphere is associated with creativity and the left hemispheres is associated with logic abilities. The corpus callosum is a bundle of axons which connects these two hemispheres.
Nerve cells make up the gray surface of the cerebrum which is a little thicker than your thumb. White nerve fibers underneath carry signals between the nerve cells and other parts of the brain and body.
The neocortex occupies the bulk of the cerebrum. This is a six-layered structure of the cerebral cortex which is only found in mammals. It is thought that the neocortex is a recently evolved structure, and is associated with "higher" information processing by more fully evolved animals (such as humans, primates, dolphins, etc). For more information about the neocortex, click here.
The Cerebellum: The cerebellum, or "little brain", is similar to the cerebrum in that it has two hemispheres and has a highly folded surface or cortex. This structure is associated with regulation and coordination of movement, posture, and balance.
The cerebellum is assumed to be much older than the cerebrum, evolutionarily. What do I mean by this? In other words, animals which scientists assume to have evolved prior to humans, for example reptiles, do have developed cerebellums. However, reptiles do not have neocortex. Go here for more discussion of the neocortex or go to the following web site for a more detailed look at evolution of brain structures and intelligence: "Ask the Experts": Evolution and Intelligence
Limbic System: The limbic system, often referred to as the "emotional brain", is found buried within the cerebrum. Like the cerebellum, evolutionarily the structure is rather old.
This system contains the thalamus, hypothalamus, amygdala, and hippocampus. Here is a visual representation of this system, from a midsagittal view of the human brain:
Click on the words to learn what these structures do:
Thalamus
Hypothalamus
Amygdala
Hippocampus
Brain Stem: Underneath the limbic system is the brain stem. This structure is responsible for basic vital life functions such as breathing, heartbeat, and blood pressure. Scientists say that this is the "simplest" part of human brains because animals' entire brains, such as reptiles (who appear early on the evolutionary scale) resemble our brain stem. Look at a good example of this here.
The brain stem is made of the midbrain, pons, and medulla. Click on the words to learn what these structures do:
Midbrain
Pons
Medulla
i dont think drugs will effect Adhd
I honestly dont think drugs will effect ADD and ADHD. Its the person who messes their lives. Its not the drugs, drugs are used for everything. Its how you use them, if you use them for wrong purpose, your gunna screw your life up.
Are Children Who Take Ritalin for ADHD at Greater Risk of Future Drug Abuse?
UCLA psychologists have conducted the most comprehensive assessment ever on this question and have found that children with ADHD who take medications such as Ritalin and Adderall are at no greater risk of using alcohol, marijuana, nicotine or cocaine later in life than kids with ADHD who don't take these medications.
The psychologists analyzed 15 long-term studies, including data from three studies not yet published. These studies followed more than 2,500 children with ADHD from childhood into adolescence and young adulthood.
"We found the children were neither more likely nor less likely to develop alcohol and substance-use disorders as a result of being treated with stimulant medication," said Kathryn Humphreys, a doctoral candidate in UCLA's Department of Psychology and lead author of the study. "We found no association between the use of medication such as Ritalin and future abuse of alcohol, nicotine, marijuana and cocaine."
The children assessed in the studies, who had a mean age of 8 years old when the studies began and 20 at the most recent follow-up assessment, come from a broad geographical range, including California, New York, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Germany and Canada. The research is published in the May 29 issue of the journal JAMA Psychiatry, a psychiatry research journal published by the American Medical Association.
The heart
The heart is the hardest-working muscle in your body. An average adult heart is about the size and shape of a closed fist. The main job of your heart is to pump blood. This section will show how the heart and blood vessels keep your body healthy. Although you may feel your heart beat when you place your hand over it, your heart is not right under your skin. Instead, your heart is behind your breastbone, inside your ribcage, and between your lungs. Each minute about 5 quarts (4.7 liters) of blood flow through your heart. Each day the average heart beats 100,000 times and pumps about 1900 gallons (7200 liters) of blood. In a 70-year lifetime, an average human heart beats more than 2.5 billion times. You need the heart to live. The heart is always beating and working.
Il cervo selvaggio vagando il sentiero salva l’umana anima dal suo pensiero.
- William Blake
deer's circulatory system
Bone Calcium
Bone Calcium
Good food sources of calcium
Dairy:Dairy products are rich in calcium in a form that is easily digested and absorbed by the body. Sources include milk, yogurt, and cheese.
Vegetables and greens:Many vegetables, especially leafy green ones, are rich sources of calcium. Try turnip greens, mustard greens, collard greens, kale, romaine lettuce, celery, broccoli, fennel, cabbage, summer squash, green beans, Brussels sprouts, asparagus, and crimini mushrooms.
Beans:For another rich source of calcium, try black beans, pinto beans, kidney beans, white beans, black-eyed peas, or baked beans.
Herbs and spices:For a small but tasty calcium boost, flavor your food with basil, thyme, dill weed, cinnamon, peppermint leaves, garlic, oregano, rosemary, and parsley.
Other foods: More good sources of calcium include salmon, tofu, oranges, almonds, sesame seeds, blackstrap molasses, and sea vegetables. And don’t forget about calcium-fortified foods such as cereals and orange juice. http://www.helpguide.org/life/healthy_diet_osteoporosis.htm
Bone Calcium
Calcium is what your body and your bones need to live a long happy life.Your body use the calcium to build healthy bones and to keep strong bones. Your body get Calcium two different ways. First is through food or the supplements you take. The other is through good diets that you should be eating.
Osteoporosis is a disease that is silent and is by bone loss. This disease is a serious disease that can make you not able to walk and you will not be able to recove from this. It also can kill people.
How much calcium do you need?
0-6 months
210 milligrams / day
7-12 months
270 milligrams / day
1-3 years
500 milligrams / day
4-8 years
800 milligrams / day
9-18 years
1,300 milligrams / day
19-50 years
1,000 milligrams / day
50+ years
1,200 milligrams / day
http://www.helpguide.org/life/healthy_diet_osteoporosis.htm
The Stretching of the Lambs Baby lambs do about 90 percent of their growing at night, and the same may hold true for growing humans. This may be a primary reason why growing pains are experienced mostly at night by young children.
Bone growth
During childhood, the long bones (in the arms, legs, and back) grow at the ends of the bones, whereas the flat bones (such as the skull) have a different pattern of growth. Adult bone actually continues to expand, although very slowly. Bone also continually undergoes remodeling, replacing old bone with new bone. Ordinary activity causes microscopic cracks in the bone, and these are dissolved and replaced with new bone. Remodeling also allows bone to respond to changes in mechanical forces. Thus, living bone is totally different from the skeleton in the closet. http://depts.washington.edu/bonebio/ASBMRed/growth.html
Bone Growth
Vocal Cords
Vocal cords are two flaps that stretch across the larynx. They vibrate in the air that passes through the larynx which produces the sounds we know as the human voice. The vocal cords respond to the air pressure that pushes through the flaps. When there are different air pressures behind the cords, they vibrate at different frequencies which produce the sound waves of the voice that we hear. These puffs of air that produce sound waves from the voice are called triygergonus.
Vocal injuries can be caused by many things such as, overuse of the cords, smoking, cancer and surgical operations. If the vocal cords are damaged severely, it is difficult to do surgery and still have them be to the same caliber as they had been in the past. Usually when the cords heal, there is a scar that is left behind which can cause a deformity of the cords when they have to close together. This can cause it to be harder to work your vocal cords, vocal fatigue, breathlessness, and dysphonia which is a disorder in speech.
One disorder of the vocal cords is laryngitis. Laryngitis is probably the most common vocal cord disorder caused by excessive use of the cords, harmful inhalants, infection, and stomach acid that was backed up into the larynx. Another disorder that is common among singers is vocal nodules. These are often caused by overuse and are small calluses that usually grow in pairs on both cords where the flaps vibrate together the most frequently. They cause the voice to be low, hoarse, and breathy. Similar to vocal nodules are vocal polyps which are non-cancerous growths that are similar to blisters which cause the same problems as nodules.
The most common vocal cord problem is vocal cord paralysis. This is when one or both of the cords is permanently stuck in one position. This can cause the person to have difficulty swallowing and coughing. It also causes a problem in that food and other things can easily pass into the lungs and cause death. This sometimes life threatening disorder can be caused by things like head, neck, and chest trauma, complication during surgery, stroke, tumor, lung or thyroid cancer, neurological disorders like Parkinson’s or multiple sclerosis, or a viral infection. Treatment for vocal cord paralysis can include surgery of voice therapy. However, sometimes treatment is unnecessary and the person can recover on their own.
Vocal cord disorders can be discovered if the patient discovers that their voice sounds hoarse or different for two weeks. After this they should get medical attention. To diagnose a vocal disorder, the doctor may use a layrngoscope to look at the vocal cords through a camera that is inserted through the nasal cavity. If paralysis is prevalent, the doctor may perform a laryngeal electromyography which measures the electric frequency of vocal cords. To treat any disorder, the patient may have to rest their voice for a period of time, treatment from a speech therapist, medication, or surgery if growths are prevalent.