neurone - traduzione in italiano
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neurone - traduzione in italiano

ELECTRICALLY EXCITABLE CELL THAT COMMUNICATES VIA SYNAPSES
Nerve cell; Neurons; Nueron; Neurone; Neuronal; Nerve cells; Human brain cell; Neurones; Neuronal loss; Nerve sheath; Nerve-cell; Neurocyte; Neurocytes; Neural cell; Neuronal doctrine; Serotonergic neuron; Seratogenic neuron; Seratonergic neuron; Adrenergic neuron; Adrenergic neurons
  • 31}}
  • Schematic of an anatomically accurate single pyramidal neuron, the primaryious excitatory neuron of cerebral cortex, with a synaptic connection from an incoming axon onto a dendritic spine
  • An annotated diagram of the stages of an action potential propagating down an axon including the role of ion concentration and pump and channel proteins
  • Neurology video
  • A signal propagating down an axon to the cell body and dendrites of the next cell
  • Diagram of a typical myelinated vertebrate motor neuron
  • Diagram of the components of a neuron
  • doi-access=free }}</ref>
  • Drawing by Camillo Golgi of a [[hippocampus]] stained using the [[silver nitrate]] method
  • [[Guillain–Barré syndrome]] – demyelination
  • Golgi-stained neurons in human hippocampal tissue
  • left
  • Neuron cell body
  • Different kinds of neurons:<br />1 [[Unipolar neuron]]<br />2 [[Bipolar neuron]]<br />3 [[Multipolar neuron]]<br />4 [[Pseudounipolar neuron]]
  • Synaptic vesicles containing neurotransmitters
  • Drawing of neurons in the pigeon [[cerebellum]], by Spanish neuroscientist [[Santiago Ramón y Cajal]] in 1899. (A) denotes [[Purkinje cell]]s and (B) denotes [[granule cells]], both of which are multipolar.
  • Drawing of a Purkinje cell in the [[cerebellar cortex]] done by [[Santiago Ramón y Cajal]], demonstrating the ability of Golgi's staining method to reveal fine detail

neurone         
n. neuron, nerve cell, basic functional unit of the nervous system (Anatomy)
nerve cell         
neurone
neurone      
n. neurone, cellula nervosa

Definizione

neurone

Wikipedia

Neuron

A neuron, neurone, or nerve cell is an electrically excitable cell that fires electric signals called action potentials. Neurons communicate with other cells via synapses - specialized connections that commonly use minute amounts of chemical neurotransmitters to pass the electric signal from the presynaptic neuron to the target cell through the synaptic gap. The neuron is the main component of nervous tissue in all animals except sponges and placozoa. Non-animals like plants and fungi do not have nerve cells.

Neurons are typically classified into three types based on their function. Sensory neurons respond to stimuli such as touch, sound, or light that affect the cells of the sensory organs, and they send signals to the spinal cord or brain. Motor neurons receive signals from the brain and spinal cord to control everything from muscle contractions to glandular output. Interneurons connect neurons to other neurons within the same region of the brain or spinal cord. When multiple neurons are functionally connected together, they form what is called a neural circuit.

A typical neuron consists of a cell body (soma), dendrites, and a single axon. The soma is a compact structure, and the axon and dendrites are filaments extruding from the soma. Dendrites typically branch profusely and extend a few hundred micrometers from the soma. The axon leaves the soma at a swelling called the axon hillock and travels for as far as 1 meter in humans or more in other species. It branches but usually maintains a constant diameter. At the farthest tip of the axon's branches are axon terminals, where the neuron can transmit a signal across the synapse to another cell. Neurons may lack dendrites or have no axon. The term neurite is used to describe either a dendrite or an axon, particularly when the cell is undifferentiated.

Most neurons receive signals via the dendrites and soma and send out signals down the axon. At the majority of synapses, signals cross from the axon of one neuron to a dendrite of another. However, synapses can connect an axon to another axon or a dendrite to another dendrite.

The signaling process is partly electrical and partly chemical. Neurons are electrically excitable, due to maintenance of voltage gradients across their membranes. If the voltage changes by a large enough amount over a short interval, the neuron generates an all-or-nothing electrochemical pulse called an action potential. This potential travels rapidly along the axon and activates synaptic connections as it reaches them. Synaptic signals may be excitatory or inhibitory, increasing or reducing the net voltage that reaches the soma.

In most cases, neurons are generated by neural stem cells during brain development and childhood. Neurogenesis largely ceases during adulthood in most areas of the brain.