Brain Bee Questions CH 1 - 11
Brain Bee Questions CH 1 - 11
Brain Bee Questions CH 1 - 11
There are 11 complete chapters in the Brain Facts and could be divided as follows:
8b Neural Disorders Part II: (we need to cover the 15 Bathiya Ratnayake
neural disorders quite extensively)
Down Syndrome --> Pain (inclusive) (15Q)
8c Neural Disorders Part III: (we need to cover the 15 Sanjay Patel
neural disorders quite extensively)
Parkinsons' --> Tourette Syndrome (inclusive)
(15Q)
The questions for the more important sections will be well‐covered. The total number of questions
will be about 140. 50% for Individual challenge, 50% for mock challenge.
Please send this to all team members.
Make questions of varying levels of difficulty, particularly leaning towards ones dealing with the
more tricky/difficult/obscure details (as these are apparently picked on in the real challenge)
The specific questions will be collated to form one long document ‐ actual questions asked
generated randomly.
Format questions documents follows (for ease of reference).:e.g
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Chapter 8A
8A Q1: What is the percentage of the American population where drugs are abused on a regular
basis?
8A Q2: ......................................................?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Neuro Questions Chapt 1&2 The Neuron & Brain Development:
Chapter 3 Sensation and Perception Jesse
3 Q1: What does the visual process begin by comparing?
3 Q2: What is the name of the place where the optic nerves from each eye cross over?
3 Q3: Where in the brain is the lateral geniculate nucleus found?
3 Q4: How many visual processing systems are there and what do they do?
3 Q5: Where is the tectorial membrane located in the ear?
3 Q6: Describe how sound travels from the outer ear to the cochlea in detail.
3 Q7: Which membrane do hair cells in the cochlea ride on?
3 Q8: How are the left auditory cortex and the right auditory cortex different?
3 Q9: What is the name of the protuberances in which taste buds are embedded?
3 Q10: How many taste buds do humans have?
3 Q11: How many specialised sensory cells does each taste bud consist of?
3 Q12: Where are olfactory receptor cells found?
3 Q13: What is the name given to the sensory fibres that respond to tissue‐damaging stimuli?
3 Q14: What is the function of prostaglandins?
3 Q15: Why does pain often remain even after the harmful stimulus has been removed (explain in
terms of the different neurones involved)?
Chapter 5 Movement
1, What are muscle fibers controlled by?
2, Complete the sentence: Skilled movements are started by a)_____________ and stopped by
b)___________________.
3, Receptors in muscles are called muscle _____________.
4, What senses the force applied by the muscle, and is located in the muscle tendons?
5, Actions by muscles can be separated into two main groups, v_________ and i__________.
6, Where is the v________ (your answer to the first part of 5) actions controlled in the brain.
7, Multi choice, choose 3 parts of the brain, which are involved in movement
Pons, oblongata medulla, movement cortex, basal ganglia, hypothalamus, hippocampus, amygdale,
cerebellum, cerebrum, thalamus, hindbrain.
Answers
Answers:
1, alpha motor neuron in the brain
2, a,agonists b,antagonists
3, spindles
4, golgi tendon organs
5, voluntary and involuntary.
6, motor cortex
7, thalamus, basal ganglia, cerebellum,
And movement cortex does not exist for the record.
8, movement disorders, rigidity
9, dopamine.
10, levodopa
Chapter 6: Sleep + Stress (Henry)
1) Who was the oldest woman and how old was her when she died in 1997 (give your answer in
the number of years and days)?
2) What was the average life expectancy in 1900?
3) More than what percentage of the population was older than 65 in 2003?
4) What fraction of people over 85 are affected by senile dementia?
5) What is the difference between normal ageing and Alzheimers'?
6) In research conducted, what significant function improves as ageing progresses?
7) What happens to the remaining neurons when the circuitry begins to break down with ageing?
8) In which main cortical Areas are the most neurons retained during ageing?
9) At what age does the brain reach its maximum weight?
10) Outline the structure of the basal ganglia
11) Outline the structure of the passacaglia.
Chapter 8A Neural Diseases
8A Q1. What are the two types of drugs classed under Psychostimulants?
8A Q2.What toxin had showed effectiveness in treating brain tumour and what does it do?
8A Q 3.What does GHB stand for and what is it known as?
8A Q 4. What was the first effective treatment of OCD inspired by?
8A Q 5.Mutation in a gene that codes for what that is responsible for some forms of ALS?
8A Q 6. How do opiates work after they are taken into the body?
8A Q 7.What are the lifetime prevalence rate of PTSD in the United States?
8A Q 8. Why are the effects of Nicotine dangerous?
8A Q 9.What can you tell us about the prevalence of Bipolar disorder in the US?
8A Q 10.How are the short term memory problems caused by Marijuana explained?
Chapter 8B Brain Bee Questions
DOWN SYNDROME
1. Q‐How prevalent in babies is Down syndrome?
2. Q‐What chromosome is typically associated with this disease?
3. Q‐ How can you accurately detect Down syndrome?
4. Q‐How many characteristics approximately is Down syndrome associated with?
DYSLEXIA
5. Q‐what approximate percentage of America have some sort of learning disability?
6. Q‐what percentage of all identified Americans as having learning disabilities does Dyslexia
affect?
7. Q‐What is the process of converting letters to sounds of the language termed?
8. Q‐What is Broca’s Area?
9. Q‐What are risk alleles?
HUNTINGTONS
10. Q‐Huntingtons killed which folk singer in 1967?
11. Q‐When does Huntingtons usually appear?
12. Q‐What 2 primary areas does Huntingtons normally affect
13. Q‐What is the genetic cause for HD?
Major Depression
14. Q‐How many more times are depressed individuals likely of conducting suicide?
15. Q‐What percentage of the American population is affected by major Depression annually?
16. Q‐What delicate system involving the hypothalamus and pituitary and adrenalglands does
this desease affect?
17. Q‐What stress, hormone do depressed patients excrete excessively?
18. Q‐what two transmitters do most antidepressant drugs usually affect?
19. Q‐what do monoamine oxidase inhibitors do?
20. Q‐what does SSRIs stand for?
21. Q‐What are SSRIs similar to with their function?
MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS
22. Q‐How much does the US lose annually for families with MS?
23. Q‐In Ms what part of the neurone is thought to be believed is acted upon as foreign tissue?
24. Q‐What are lesions or plaques in association with MS?
25. Q‐what climates is MS more prevalent in?
26. Q‐What are contractures?
NEURALOGICAL AIDS
27. Q‐How many people in the world are living with HIV?
28. Q‐What is a Cytokine?
29. Q‐what protein secreted by infected cells is suspected of neurotoxicity?
30. Q‐what happens to the brains of these patients?
NEURALOGICAL TRAUMA
31. Q‐what is the approximate economic cost of those living with traumatic injury?
32. Q‐what is oedema?
33. Q‐what percentage of moderate to severe head injury deaths was cut by the hormone
progesterone in a clinical trial?
34. Q‐to reduce intracranial presseure doctors may remove part of the skull to allow the brain to
swell, what is this process called?
35. Q‐spinal cord injuries may become less severly impaired if they receive high doses of which
steroid drug within eight hours?
36. Q‐what is the process of giving birth to new nerve cells termed?
PAIN
37. Q‐local anaesthesia affects which ion channel?
38. Q‐What are the four types of analgesias?
39. Q‐what area are opiate receptors concentrated in the body?
40. Q‐what is the peripheral nerve fiber that initially responds to injury?
Chapter 8C
8C Q1: In the event of a stroke free radicals are released. What does it cause damage to?
8C Q2: Which neurobiological disorder is characterised by vocal and motor tics?
8C Q3: What do antiepileptics drug, which are administered to epileptic patients, target?
8C Q4: What causes Parkinson’s disease?
8C Q5: What substance is added to levadopa and what does it prevent?
8C Q6: What are typical symptoms of Parkinson’s disease?
8C Q7: The surgical removal of which nuclei reduce the symptoms of Parkinson’s?
8C Q8: Approximately what percentage of the American population is affected by schizophrenia?
8C Q9: What percentage of patients die from stroke?
8C Q10: The use of which arm after a stroke can aid in recovery, the affected arm or the
unaffected arm?
8C Q11: There are two types of epilepsies, what are they?
8C Q12: An implantable pacemakerlike device can be implanted in epileptic patients. Via what
cranial nerve does the signal travel and what type of epilepsy does it reduce the frequency of?
8C Q13: Name one the stimulant drugs given to TS patients.
8C Q14: TS patients often have other associated conditions (e.g. learning difficulties). Name
another associated conditions.
8C Q15: What are the annual costs of schizophrenia?
Answers
1) Endothelium of the blood vessel and mitochondria of the neurons
2) Tourette syndrome
3) Ion channels and neurotransmitters receptors
4) Low levels of dopamine due to the death of dopamine‐producing neurons in the substantia
nigra
5) Carbidopa, it prevents the peripheral breakdown of dopamine
6) Slowness of movement, muscular rigidity, tremor and postural instability
7) The pallidum and the subthalamic nucleus
8) 1%
9) 21.4%
10) The unaffected arm
11) General seizures and partial epilepsies
12) Via the vagus (X) nerve and reduces the frequency of partial epilepsies
13) Methylphenidate or dextroamphetamine
14) Obsessive thoughts or compulsive rituals or difficulties with attention
15) $32.5 billion
Chapter 9 New Diagnostic Methods
JunYoung LEE
Brain Bee Potential Therapy Questions