Autonomic nervous sytem Flashcards

0
Q

Different kind of ANS

A

Sympathetic - fight or flight, increased alertness and metabolic activities in order to prepare the body for an emergency situation

parasympathetic - rest and digest, activities conserve and restore body energy, most output is to smooth muscle and glands of GI tract and respiratory tract

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1
Q

the different kinds of PNS

A

Somatic nervous system - consciously controlled, voluntary, sensory receptors and motor neurons to skeletal mm

Autonomic nervous system -involuntary, sensory from visceral organ, motor to smooth mm, cardiac mm and glands

Enteric nervous system - involuntary, sensory from chemical changes in GI tract and stretching it, motor to GI smooth muscle

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2
Q

what is autonomic tone

A

most organs receive innervation from both divisions of ANS, which typically work in opposition to one another
autonomic tone is the balance between Sympathetic and parasympathetic activity

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3
Q

what regulates Autonomic tone

A

by hypothalamus

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4
Q

which structures only receive sympathetic innervation?

A
Sweat glands
Arrector pili mm
kidneys
spleen
most blood vessels
adrenal medulla
They exhibit responses by decreasing and increasing sympathetic tone
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5
Q

Sympathetic responses

A

during physical or emotional stress, Sympathetic division dominates the parasympathetic system

high sympathetic tone favors body functions that can support vigorous physical activity and rapid production of ATP

reduction in body functions that favor storage of energy

emotions can stimulate sympathetic division (fear, embarrassement, rage)

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6
Q

what is the body’s response to Sympathetic response?

A
fight or flight
pupils dilate
heart rate , force of heart contraction and BP increases
airways dilate (faster movement of air into and out of lungs)
BV to skeletal mm dilate
BV to cardiac mm dilate
BV to GI tract constrict
BV to kidneys constrict
BV to liver dilate (glucogenesis)
BV to adipose tissue dilate
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7
Q

Parasympathetic responses

A

rest and digest

body functions that conserve and restore body energy during times of rest and recovery

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8
Q

What is the body response to parasympathetic response

A
Salivation
Lacrimation
Urination
Digestion
Defecation

decreased heart rate
decreased diameter of airways
decreased diameter of pupils

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9
Q

classification of nerve fibers

A

A fibers: largest diameter, myelinated, brief absolute refectory period, fast, sensory neurons, motor neurons to skeletal mm

B fibers: medium diameter, myelinated, medium absolute refractory period, conduct nerve impulses from visceral to CNS

C fibers: smallest diameter, Unmyelinated, longest absolute refractory period, pain from viscera, all postganglionic neurons

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10
Q

Sensory input for somatic nervous system

A

From receptors for somatic senses (tactile, thermal, pain, proprioceptive sensations) and from receptors for special senses (sight, hearing, taste, smell, equilibrium). consciously received

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11
Q

Autonomic nervous system sensory input

A
from interoreceptors (sensory receptors located in BVs, visceral organs, mm and nn that monitor conditions in the internal environment)
not usually consciously perceived.)
Chemo, baro, mechano (bv) receptors
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12
Q

Somatic Nervous system control of motor output

A

Primary motor area of cerebral cortex

voluntary (with contributions from basal nuclei, cerebellum, brain stem and SC)

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13
Q

Autonomic nervous system control of motor output

A

involuntary control from hypothalamus

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14
Q

Somatic nervous system motor neuron pathway

A
one neuron path way
somatic motor neuron goes from CNS to skeletal mm
myelinated
from anterior horn
release Ach
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15
Q

Autonomic Nervous system Motor neuron pathway

A

Preganglionic neuron is myelinated but postganglionic neuron is not
two neuron pathway
Either release Ach or Norepinephrine (or NE or Einephrine in Chromaffin cell in adrenal gland)

16
Q

autonomic motor pathways 3 may parts

A
  1. preganglionic neuron (Thorocolumbar division/sympathetic division)
  2. Postganglionic neuron
  3. Autonomic ganglia (Sympathetic division and parasympathetic division)
17
Q

Types of sympathetic division

A
  1. sympathetic trunk ganglia/vertebral chain ganglia/paravertebral ganglia (superior, middle, inferior cervical ganglia) for organs above diaphragm T1-L2 or 3
  2. Prevertebral (collateral) ganglia (Celiac, superior mesentric, inferior mesentric, Aorticorenal, Renal ganglia) for organs below diaphragm
18
Q

Parasympathetic division

A
Terminal (intramural) ganglia
most of these are located close to or within the wall of a visceral organ 
Ciliary ganglion
Otic ganglion
Pterygopalatine ganglion
Submandibular ganglion
19
Q

4 ways Sympathetic preganglionic neurons connect with postganglionic neurons

A
  1. In the first ganglion it reaches
  2. the axon may ascend or decend to a higher or lower ganglion nd synapse there
  3. The axon may go through the sypathetic trunk ganglion to synapse in a prevertebral ganglion
  4. The axon may pass through the sympathetic trunk ganglion and prevertebral ganglion to synapse with chromaffin cells of the adrenal medulla
20
Q

What is divergence

A

a single sympathetic preganglionic fiber has many axon collaterals and may synapse with 20 + post ganglionic neurons. that’s how sympathetic responses affect almost the entire body simultaneously

21
Q

Where does parasympathetic preganglionic neurons pass?

A

To terminal ganglia near or within a visceral effector

22
Q

why are parasympathetic response localised to a single effector

A

because it only synapses with 4 or 5 postsynaptic neurons and all of them supply a single effector

23
Q

what is autonomic plexuses

A

Tangled neworks of axons of sympathetic and parasympathetic neurons in thorax, abdomen and pelvis
also contain sympathetic ganglia and axons of autonomic sensory neurons