Sodium, potassium, and calcium are the important electrolytes involved in nerve impulses
The Optic Nerve
Unmyelinated nerve fibers conduct impulses more slowly than myelinated nerve fibers. Myelinated nerve fibers have a fatty substance called myelin sheath that allows for faster transmission of impulses compared to unmyelinated fibers without this sheath.
impulses travel down cranial nerve 2 to what lobe
The nerve carrying impulses from your brain to your eyelids would be a cranial nerve, such as the oculomotor nerve (responsible for eyelid movement), while the nerve carrying impulses to your heart would be part of the autonomic nervous system, such as the vagus nerve (regulating heart rate). Additionally, the nerve to the heart would primarily involve motor signals, while the nerve to the eyelids would involve sensory and motor signals for eyelid function.
The olfactory nerve, also known as cranial nerve I, conducts impulses from the nose to the olfactory bulbs in the brain. It is responsible for the sense of smell.
Glucose and salt are two very important components of blood. Glucose is for energy and salt makes electrolyte that helps transmit nerve impulses.
Chloride is commonly used as a disinfectant in water treatment and as an important electrolyte in the body for maintaining fluid balance and transmitting nerve impulses.
no, a calcium salt is an electrolyte
the spinal nerve sends nerve impulses away from the CNS
nerve impulses
Nerve impulses are electrical signals.
vagus nerve
Nerve impulses are measured in MiliVolts (mv)
No, that is just nerve impulses
Neuron
No, axons carry impulses away from the nerve cell body.
Impulses carried by the olfactory nerve are for the sense of smell.