Back to Topic 3.5 — Neural signalling
3.5.4Biology SL12 flashcards

Conduction speed & myelination

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Card 1 of 123.5.4
3.5.4
Question

What three factors mainly determine the speed of a nerve impulse?

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All 12 Flashcards — Conduction speed & myelination

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Card 1concept

Question

What three factors mainly determine the speed of a nerve impulse?

Answer

**Myelination**, **saltatory conduction** (nodes of Ranvier), and **axon diameter**.

Card 2definition

Question

What is the myelin sheath?

Answer

A **fatty insulating layer** that wraps around the axon of some neurons.

Card 3definition

Question

What is a node of Ranvier?

Answer

A **gap in the myelin sheath** where the axon membrane is exposed and the action potential is regenerated.

Card 4definition

Question

What is saltatory conduction?

Answer

Conduction in which the impulse **'jumps' from one node of Ranvier to the next**, instead of moving continuously along the membrane.

Card 5concept

Question

Why does myelination speed up conduction?

Answer

The myelin **insulates** the axon, so the impulse only forms at the nodes and **jumps** between them — much faster than continuous conduction.

Card 6concept

Question

Where does depolarization occur on a myelinated axon?

Answer

**Only at the nodes of Ranvier** — the gaps in the myelin; the sheath insulates the rest of the axon.

Card 7concept

Question

How does axon diameter affect conduction speed?

Answer

A **wider** axon conducts **faster** because it has **less internal resistance** to the flow of charge.

Card 8concept

Question

Which conducts faster: a myelinated or an unmyelinated axon?

Answer

A **myelinated** axon — it uses fast saltatory conduction; an unmyelinated axon conducts slowly and continuously.

Card 9concept

Question

Of four axons, which conducts a nerve impulse most slowly?

Answer

The **thin, unmyelinated** one — no saltatory conduction and high internal resistance.

Card 10concept

Question

Of four axons, which conducts a nerve impulse fastest?

Answer

The **wide, myelinated** one — saltatory conduction plus low internal resistance.

Card 11concept

Question

What does the word 'saltatory' mean, and why is it apt?

Answer

It comes from the Latin for **'to jump'** — the impulse leaps from node to node.

Card 12concept

Question

Why is a myelinated axon described as 'insulated'?

Answer

The fatty myelin sheath acts like the plastic coating on a wire, **insulating** the axon so the impulse only forms at the bare nodes.

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