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Home > Autonomic nervous system


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1 Anatomy and Physiology of the A.N.S.

In contrast to the voluntary nervous system, the "involuntary" or autonomic nervous system is responsible for homeostasis, maintaining a relatively constant internal environment by controlling such involuntary functions as digestion, respiration, and metabolism, and by modulating blood pressure. Although these functions are generally outside of voluntary control, they are not outside our awareness, and they may be influenced by ones state of mind.

The autonomic nervous system is divided into two subsystems, the sympathetic and the parasympathetic, which work in tandem, either in a synergistic or an antagonistic way. The sympathetic system is responsible for providing responses and energy needed to cope with stressful situations such as fear or extremes of physical activity. In response to such stress, the sympathetic system: raises blood pressure, heart rate, and the blood supply to the skeletal muscles at the expense of the gastrointestinal tract, kidneys, and skin; dilates both the pupils and the bronchioles, providing improved vision and oxygenation ; and generates needed energy by stimulating glycogenolysis in the liver and lipolysis in adipose tissue. In general, it serves to stimulate organs and to mobilize energy.

Between stressful situations, the body needs to rest, recover, and gain new energy. These tasks are under the control of the parasympathetic system, which lowers the heart rate and blood pressure, diverts blood back to the skin and the gastrointestinal tract, contracts the pupils and bronchioles, stimulates salivary glandThe salivary glands produce saliva, which keeps the mouth and other parts of the digestive system moist. It also helps break down food and lubricates the passage of food down from the oro- pharynx to the esophagus to the stomach. There are three main pair secretion, and accelerates peristalsisPeristalsis is the process of involuntary wave-like successive muscular contractions by which food is moved through the digestive tract. The large, hollow organs of the digestive system contain muscle that enables their walls to move. The movement of orga. The parasympathetic system influences organs toward restoration and the saving of energy.

Some anatomists refer to a third, or enteric, system primarily situated in the intestinal walls. It can be modulated by both sympathetic and parasympathetic nerve fibers which are connected to plexuses in the several layers of the walls. However, the enteric nervous systemThe enteric nervous system is an interdependent part of the autonomic nervous system. Despite of its many interactions with other parts of the ANS, it can be regarded as a nerval body of its own. Its functioning is still subject to research in neurogastro is capable of operating on its own, even after having been severed from input from the SNS and PNS. This is why the enteric nervous system is sometimes referred to as a "second brain." (Hospital Practice, The Enteric Nervous System: A Second Brain, Michael D. Gershon, MD, Columbia University) ([1])

The enteric nervous system regulates secretions of the intestinal glands, regeneration of the intestinal epitheliumIn zootomy, epithelium is a tissue composed of epithelial cells. Such tissue tends to surround parts of the body, somewhat like a cell membrane. It is also used to form glands. The epithelium is usually the layer of cells 'closer' to the outside world., and intestinal motility. The ENS is sometimes considered the third part of the autonomic nervous system.

In contrast to the voluntary motor nerves, which consist of only one cell, or neuronNeurons (also called nerve cells are the primary cells of the nervous system. In vertebrates, they are found in the brain, the spinal cord and in the nerves and ganglia of the peripheral nervous system. Classes There are three classes of neurons: afferent, the sympathetic and parasympathetic fibres have both a "preganglionic" and a "postganglionic" nerve cell. They meet at a ganglionIn vertebrate anatomy, a ganglion is a tissue mass that contains the dendrites and cell bodies (or "somas") of nerve cells, in most case ones belonging to the peripheral nervous system. Within the central nervous system such a mass is often called a nucle, where the nerve impulse is transferred from cell to cell, at a synapse, by the chemical transmitter acetylcholine, or "ACH". ACH is released from the first neuron and binds to a nicotinic acetylcholine receptor on the second. The latter transfers the impulse to an effector cell by releasing a second neurotransmitter. In parasympathetic fibres, the second transmitter is again ACH, while noradrenaline serves as the second transmitter in the sympathetic system. Preganglionic sympathetic fibres also end in the adrenal medulla, which functions as a giant ganglion which, instead of releasing a transmitter into a synapse, releases its second neurotransmitter, noradrenaline or adrenaline, directly into the blood stream.

The cell bodies of preganglionic autonomic nerve cells are situated in the central nervous system. Those of the sympathetic nervous system arise in the thoracal and lumbal segments of the spinal cord. The preganglionic parasympathetic cell bodies are situated in the brain stem (cranial parasympathetic) and in the sacral spinal cord (sacral parasympathetic).

The sympathetic axons build a chain of 22 ganglia, the so-called trunk of the sympathetic nerve , on each side of the spinal column. From these the splanchnic nerves run to the prevertebral ganglia, which lie in front of the aorta, at the level where its unpaired visceral arteries branch off. The left and right trunks of the sympathetic nerve fuse to form an unpaired ganglion in the pelvic area. Organs innervated by sympathetic fibres include the heart, lungs, esophagus, stomach, small and large intestine, liver, gallbladder and genital organs.

These organs are also innervated by the parasympathetic nervous system. The digestive system distal to the lower part of the colon is regulated by the sacral parasympathetic fibres via the pelvic ganglia. The more proximal digestive tract is controlled by the vagus nerve, the largest element of the cranial parasympathetic system. Like those of the vagus, other cranial parasympathetic fibers arise in the brain stem before exiting the skull with various cranial nerves, en route to the cranial parasympathetic ganglia and the innervation of the eye muscles and salivary glands.



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