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Nervous tissue is found in the brain, spinal
cord, and nerves. It is responsible for coordinating and controlling
many body activities. It stimulates muscle contraction, creates
an awareness of the environment, and plays a major role in
emotions, memory, and reasoning. To do all these things, cells
in nervous tissue need to be able to communicate with each
other by way of electrical nerve impulses.
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The cells in nervous tissue that generate and conduct impulses are
called neurons
or nerve cells. These cells have three principal parts: the dendrites,
the cell body, and one axon.
The main part of the cell, the part that carries on the general functions,
is the cell body. Dendrites are extensions, or processes, of the cytoplasm
that carry impulses to the cell body. An extension or process called
an axon carries impulses away from the cell body.
Nervous tissue also includes cells that do not transmit impulses,
but instead support the activities of the neurons. These are the
glial cells (neuroglial cells), together termed the neuroglia.
Supporting, or glia, cells bind neurons together and insulate the
neurons. Some are phagocytic and protect against bacterial invasion,
while others provide nutrients by binding blood vessels to the neurons.
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