Mylein is Fat, and is white.
Answer #2 Myelin is actually a cell covering the "shaft" of a nerve axon, improving conduction across the cell as a whole. It doesn't hold stain as well, and generally appears whiter than unmyelinated cells, so they are white. Myelin isn't fat.
a nerve fiber that lacks the fatty myelin insulating sheath. Such fibers form the gray matter of the nervous system, as distinguished from the white matter of myelinated fibers. Also called nonmedullated nerve fiber.
If I was paying attention in med school, I think... The pre-ganglionic fibers are myelinated and the post-ganglionic are unmyelinated. This is in reference to the sympathetic and parasympathetic systems.
pons
Unmyelinated nerve fibers are slower than myelinated nerve fibers. The fibers covered by myelin are much faster.
Yes. Myelinated fibers have a myelin sheath around them which keeps the impulse from scattering and on a direct path. This makes the impulse travel faster than unmyelinated fibers.
white
a nerve fiber that lacks the fatty myelin insulating sheath. Such fibers form the gray matter of the nervous system, as distinguished from the white matter of myelinated fibers. Also called nonmedullated nerve fiber.
If I was paying attention in med school, I think... The pre-ganglionic fibers are myelinated and the post-ganglionic are unmyelinated. This is in reference to the sympathetic and parasympathetic systems.
pons
The white matter consist of myelinated nerve fibers.
Impulse transmission on an unmyelinated nerve fiber is much slower than the impulse transmission on a myelinated nerve fiber.
Unmyelinated nerve fibers are slower than myelinated nerve fibers. The fibers covered by myelin are much faster.
Preganglionic because they are myelinated. FALSE
Heavily myelinated, large diameter fibers
These are nerves in animals. They include central and peripheral; peripheral include somatic and autonomic.
it is the substance surrounding the gray matter. It is also composed of myelinated nerve fibers and makes up nerve pathways called tracts.
Yes. Myelinated fibers have a myelin sheath around them which keeps the impulse from scattering and on a direct path. This makes the impulse travel faster than unmyelinated fibers.