what are neurotransmitters? with example.
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Neurotransmitters, also known as chemical messengers, are endogenous chemicals that enable neurotransmission.
Example : Neurotransmitters, also known as chemical messengers, are endogenous chemicals that enable neurotransmission.
Example : Neurotransmitters, also known as chemical messengers, are endogenous chemicals that enable neurotransmission.
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HELLO FRND.
___________
NEUROTRANSMITTER.
Neurotransmitters are chemical signals that can affect the feelings of the mind, hunger, anxiety and fear. Let us see what happens in our nervous system.
Within our brain, muscles and glands, WE have neural cells called neurons who have the job to pass the signal.
An easy way to think of these cells is to imagine them as baseball players by giving them baseball around the field.
'Baseballs' are chemical signals that are thrown into players. Neurotransmitters are thrown from a neuron's terminal branch (or pitching at the hands) from synaptic distances from another neuron dendrites (or hand holding).
Catcher is excited by a chemical signal, travels by pitching hand or electric acid, and the neurotransmitter fires in the last terminal branches of Anonon.
In the human body, there are billions of neurons and they are not all the same. There are some short pitching arms and some have stretched three feet stretched!
In some nervous systems, neurotransmitters are rapidly exposed to one mph per hour and others throw at a speed of 268 miles per hour! They also make different positions of different medicinal organs.
Part of your sensory nervous system signals to our brain neurons, and your brain neurons stop your motor neurons due to avoided fires.
Your brain gives you information about what your brain sees and hears, which sends signals to your muscles, so you can react. So when we look at the ball while moving in our direction, our brain sends signals to go and catch the neurons ball.
______________
THANK YOU
@SRK6
___________
NEUROTRANSMITTER.
Neurotransmitters are chemical signals that can affect the feelings of the mind, hunger, anxiety and fear. Let us see what happens in our nervous system.
Within our brain, muscles and glands, WE have neural cells called neurons who have the job to pass the signal.
An easy way to think of these cells is to imagine them as baseball players by giving them baseball around the field.
'Baseballs' are chemical signals that are thrown into players. Neurotransmitters are thrown from a neuron's terminal branch (or pitching at the hands) from synaptic distances from another neuron dendrites (or hand holding).
Catcher is excited by a chemical signal, travels by pitching hand or electric acid, and the neurotransmitter fires in the last terminal branches of Anonon.
In the human body, there are billions of neurons and they are not all the same. There are some short pitching arms and some have stretched three feet stretched!
In some nervous systems, neurotransmitters are rapidly exposed to one mph per hour and others throw at a speed of 268 miles per hour! They also make different positions of different medicinal organs.
Part of your sensory nervous system signals to our brain neurons, and your brain neurons stop your motor neurons due to avoided fires.
Your brain gives you information about what your brain sees and hears, which sends signals to your muscles, so you can react. So when we look at the ball while moving in our direction, our brain sends signals to go and catch the neurons ball.
______________
THANK YOU
@SRK6
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