nerve cells are everywhere! for example, you get inched and it hurts. the pain sends signals to your brain. your brain then causes you to react...by saying OUCH!!! When the signals get sent to your brain, your brain tells them how to react...you bbleed, your brain tells the affected area to create a scab.
Yes. The body is composed of cells that make up four different tissue groups; connective tissue, nervous tissue, muscular tissue, and epithelial tissue. So nerves are made of many nerve cells that are made of nervous tissue.
Nervous tissue is what is responsible for sensing and transmitting nerve signals throughout the body. Neurons are the basic unit of the nervous system. Nervous tissue is one of four types of animal tissue.
The cells that nerves are made of are axons.
false
sensorineural hearing loss
equillibrium is balance and the semi circular canals in the ear affect it
Nerve cells are a part of the nervous system. There are nerve cells all around the body. Without nerve cells your body would not function the way it does.
A group of nerve cells all together is called a ganglion. These nerve cells are linked by synapses and attach to a nerve fiber.
The slowest dividing cells in the human body are the nerve cells. Nerve cells generate and conduct electrical impulses, allowing communication between the central nervous system and the rest of the body.
ganglion cells
False
Neuroblastoma
False
False
The brain is composed of two types of cells, nerve cells and glial cells.
Optic nerve
Nerves are composed of nerve cells; the long connecting parts of the nerve cells are called axons. The biochemistry of nerve cells is similar to that of other cells, but they do have an insulating layer, the myelin sheath, which gives them a relatively high concentration of fat.
Perhaps the brain is the answer you seek.
Nerve conduction deafness is one of the two types of deafness that can happen. It occurs when there is a break in communication between the nerve cells and the inner ear.
the out hair cells (OHC)push against the tectorial membrane in response to efferent innervation from the CNS the seventh cranial nerve it's the inner hair cells (IHC) that provide the sense of hearing afferent innervation to the CNS the eighth cranial nerve
The auditory nerve, which is part of cranial nerve VIII or the vestibulocochlear nerve, connects the hair cells of the cochlea in the inner ear with the cochlear nucleus, located in the brainstem at the junction of the pons and medulla.