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Ch. 18 The Endocrine System
Martini - Fundamentals of Anatomy & Physiology 11th Edition
Martini, Nath, Bartholomew11th EditionFundamentals of Anatomy & PhysiologyISBN: 9780136874089Not the one you use?Change textbook
Chapter 18, Problem 18

What is the primary difference in the way the nervous and endocrine systems communicate with their target cells?

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1
Step 1: Understand that both the nervous and endocrine systems are responsible for communication within the body, but they use different methods to send signals to target cells.
Step 2: Recognize that the nervous system communicates through electrical impulses and chemical neurotransmitters that travel across synapses to specific target cells, allowing for rapid and precise responses.
Step 3: Understand that the endocrine system communicates by releasing hormones into the bloodstream, which then travel to target cells throughout the body, resulting in slower but longer-lasting effects.
Step 4: Compare the speed and specificity of communication: the nervous system provides fast, short-term, and localized communication, whereas the endocrine system provides slower, long-term, and widespread communication.
Step 5: Summarize that the primary difference lies in the mode of communication—nervous system uses electrical and chemical signals directly to target cells, while the endocrine system uses hormones transported through the blood to reach target cells.

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Key Concepts

Here are the essential concepts you must grasp in order to answer the question correctly.

Nervous System Communication

The nervous system communicates through electrical impulses and chemical signals called neurotransmitters. These signals travel rapidly along neurons to specific target cells, enabling quick and precise responses, such as muscle contraction or sensory perception.
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Endocrine System Communication

The endocrine system uses hormones released into the bloodstream to communicate with target cells. This method is slower than nervous signaling but allows for widespread and longer-lasting effects, regulating processes like growth, metabolism, and reproduction.
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Target Specificity and Speed

Nervous system signals are fast and target specific, affecting particular cells almost instantly. In contrast, endocrine signals are slower, traveling through the blood to reach multiple target cells throughout the body, resulting in more prolonged but less precise effects.
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