Autonomic Nervous System
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Physiology
- ANS is a division of the peripheral nervous system that supplies internal organs, smooth muscle and glands.
- It is a control system that acts unconsciously and regulates bodily functions such as:
- Heart rate and its force of contraction
- Digestion
- Respiratory rate
- Pupillary response
- Urination
- Sexual arousal
- Fight-or-flight response
- Vasomotor activity (the vasomotor center)
- Certain reflex actions such as coughing, sneezing, swallowing and vomiting.
- ANS is regulated by integrated reflexes through the brain-stem to the spinal cord and organs.
- Hypothalamus acts as an integrator for autonomic functions, receiving autonomic regulatory input from the limbic system.
ANS branches
- Sympathetic nervous system
- Parasympathetic nervous system
- Visceral / Sensory nervous system
- Enteric nervous system
Sympathetic division
- It consists of cells with bodies in the lateral grey column from T1 to L2/3.
- These cell bodies are preganglionic neurons
- These all contain Afferent (sensory) nerves as well, known as General Visceral Afferent neurons.
Parasympathetic division
- It consists of cells with bodies in one of two locations:
- Brainstem (Cranial Nerves III, VII, IX, X)
- Sacral spinal cord (S2, S3, S4). These are the preganglionic neurons, which synapse with postganglionic neurons in these locations:
- These ganglia provide the postganglionic neurons from which innervations of target organs follows. Examples are:
- Postganglionic parasympathetic splanchnic (visceral) nerves
- Vagus nerve which innervates heart, lungs, liver and stomach
Visceral / Sensory neurons
- It is composed of primary visceral sensory neurons found in the peripheral nervous system (PNS) in cranial sensory ganglia
- Visceral sensory information constantly and unconsciously modulates the activity of the motor neurons of ANS.
- They monitor the
- Levels of carbon dioxide, oxygen and sugar in the blood
- Arterial pressure
- Chemical composition of the stomach and gut content.
- Sense of taste and smell, which, unlike most functions of the ANS, is a conscious perception.
- Input from a nearby chemosensory center: The memory that ensures that an animal that has been poisoned by a food never touches it again
- All this
- Pain in any internal organ is perceived as referred pain, more specifically as pain from the dermatome corresponding to the spinal segment.
Target organ/system | Parasympathetic | Sympathetic |
---|---|---|
Digestive system |
|
Decrease activity of digestive system |
Liver | No effect | Releasing glucose to blood |
Lungs | Constricts bronchioles | Dilates bronchioles |
Urinary bladder/ Urethra | Relaxes sphincter | Constricts sphincter |
Kidneys | No effects | Decrease urine output |
Heart | Decreases rate | Increase rate |
Blood vessels | No effect | Constricts blood vessels in viscera; increase BP |
Salivary and Lacrimal glands | Increases saliva and tears | Dry mouth /eyes |
Eye (iris) | Constrict pupils | Dilates pupils |
Eye (ciliary muscles) | Increase bulging of lens for close vision | Decrease bulging of lens; prepares for distant vision |
Adrenal Medulla | No effect | Increase secretion epinephrine / norepinephrine |
Sweat gland of skin | No effect | Increase perspiration |
Sexual organs |
|
Autonomic Dysregulation / Dysauthonomia
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