MEDICAL PHYSIOLOGY

PHYSIOLOGY

NEUROTRANSMISSION

Question [CLICK ON ANY CHOICE TO KNOW THE RIGHT ANSWER]
What does the sheath do?
A
Makes sure it doesn’t lose energy
B
Protects it
C
Holds it in place
D
Allows it to move around
Explanation: 

Detailed explanation-1: -The myelin sheath has three functions: Its fatty-protein coating provides protective insulation for your nerve cell, like the plastic insulation covering that encases the wires of an electrical cord. It allows the electrical impulses to travel quickly and efficiently between one nerve cell and the next.

Detailed explanation-2: -The myelin sheath wraps around the fibers that are the long threadlike part of a nerve cell. The sheath protects these fibers, known as axons, a lot like the insulation around an electrical wire. When the myelin sheath is healthy, nerve signals are sent and received quickly.

Detailed explanation-3: -The myelin sheath is the protective, fatty coating surrounding your nerve fibers, similar to the protective insulation around electrical wires. This coating enables the electrical impulses between nerve cells to travel back and forth rapidly.

Detailed explanation-4: -Myelin is the fatty protective coating that surrounds nerve fibres-a bit like the insulation on an electrical wire. As well as protecting the fragile nerve fibres, myelin also allows messages to travel quickly along the nerves without being lost or interrupted.

Detailed explanation-5: -sheath. A protective covering. The lower part of leaf enveloping stem or culm. A secreted, tubular structure formed around a chain of cells or around a bundle of filaments, cells within a sheath may or may not subsequently separate from the sheath. a layer of outer membrane covering the bacterial flagella.

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