Intro to autonomic nervous system Flashcards

1
Q

Does the autonomic nervous system have sensory function?

A

No.

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2
Q

What are the similarities between innervation of somatic vs. innervation of visceral structures?

A
  1. The same basic neuronal components (spinal cord gray matter, nerve fibers, ganglia) 2. Supplied by both afferent (sensory) and efferent (motor) neural pathways. 3. The sensory pathways serving both types of structures have afferent (sensory) fibers from sensory (pseudounipolar) cells in spinal (dorsal root) ganglia.
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3
Q

What do visceral motor neurons innervate?

A

cardiac muscle, smooth muscle, & glands.

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4
Q

What does the sympathetic division of the ANS do?

A

Fight, flight or fright.

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5
Q

What does the parasympathetic division of the ANS do?

A

Rest and digest

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6
Q

How many neurons in a basic autonomic pathway?

A

2 neurons

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7
Q

In the basic autonomic pathway, where is the first neuron?

A

In the CNS (either brain or spinal cord)

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8
Q

In the basic autonomic pathway, where is the second neuron?

A

Nn a specific type of ganglion called an autonomic ganglion (NOT dorsal root ganglia), derived also from neural crest cells that migrate to their specific locations.

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9
Q

What the of neurons arise from the lateral horn of the spinal cord? From what part of the spine?

A

T1 - L2 lateral horn has sympathetic S2 - S4 lateral horn has parasympathetic

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10
Q

What are the key details of neuron #1 in the ANS pathway?

A
  • gives preganglionic fiber
  • cell body in the CNS, axon passes out to the periphery
  • synapses onto a neuron in an autonomic ganglion
  • uses acetylcholine (ACh) as its neurotransmitter
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11
Q

What are the key details of neuron #2 in the ANS pathway?

A
  • gives postganglionic fiber
  • cell body in an autonomic ganglion
  • axon terminates on the target organ: cardiac muscle, smooth muscle, or gland
  • uses ACh (parasympathetic) or NE (typically for sympathetic) as its neurotransmitter
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12
Q

What is the primary feature that distinguishes the autonomic NS from the somatic system?

A

The presence of ganglia in the autonomic motor pathway.

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13
Q

Where do preganglionic fibers leave the spinal cord?

A

Anterior (ventral) roots

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14
Q

What is a brain stem nucleus?

A

a group of cell bodies (and their dendrites) in the CNS, analogous to a ganglion in the PNS.

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15
Q

What does CN X supply?

A

Cranial nerve X (Vagus nerve) is the only cranial nerve that supplies thoracic and abdominal organs.

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16
Q

Where are the cell bodies of post-ganglionic fibers?

A

autonomic ganglia in the peripheral nervous system.

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17
Q

Describe paravertebral ganglia

A

sympathetic; located just adjacent to the vertebral column

Sometimes simply referred to as “sympathetic chain ganglia”

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18
Q

Describe pre-vertebral ganglia

A

sympathetic; also called “preaortic”, located near the abdominal aorta

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19
Q

Describe intramural ganglia

A

parasympathetic; located “in the wall” (= intramural) of the target organ; contribute to the enteric nervous system – “brain in the gut”

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20
Q

True/False: Many organs are innervated by both sympathetic and parasympathetic systems

A

True!

They often act as a “push/pull” system, where one will increase and action while the other decreases the same action. (eg. heart rate)

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21
Q

Which organs are innervated by only the sympathetic nervous system?

A

Sweat glands and most smooth muscle of blood vessels (some blood vessels also have parasympathetic)

22
Q

What do pre-ganglionic nerve fibers of both parasympathetic and sympathetic systems use as neurotransmitter?

A

acetylcholine (ACh)

23
Q

What do parasympathetic postganglionic fibers use for neurotransmitter?

A

acetylcholine (ACh)

24
Q

What do sympathetic postganglionic fibers use for neurotransmitter?

A

Mostly norepinephrine (NE).

25
Q

Do sympathetic and parasympathetic nerve fibers share ganglia?

A

No, they do not like to share.

They do not synapse in the same ganglion, with some exceptions that we don’t have to learn yet.

26
Q

Where do parasympathetic preganglionic fibers synapse?

A

Parasympathetic ganglia in the head, and in intramural ganglia of thoracic and abdominal viscera

27
Q

Where do sympathetic preganglionic fibers synapse?

A

Paravertebral or prevertebral ganglia.

28
Q

Which cranial nerves give rise to parasympathetics?

A

III, VII, IX, and X

29
Q

What is the longest parasympathetic nerve and what does it innervate?

A

The vagus nerve, and it innervates the thoracic

organs and some of the gut.

30
Q

Aside from the part that is innervated by the vagus nerve, the rest of the digestive tract is supplied by _______ nerves called ______________, that come from segments __________.

A

The rest of the digestive tract is supplied by parasympathetic nerves called pelvic splanchnic nerves, that from sacral cord segments S2, 3, and 4.

31
Q

The term thoracolumbar referes to which pathway of the ANS?

A

Sympathetic.

All of the sympathetic pre-ganglionic fibers originate from the lateral horn of T1-L2

32
Q

What are the two types of ganglia in the sympathetic nervous system?

A

Paravertebral and prevertebral

33
Q

What are the 3 types of targets of the sympathetic fibers?

A

Thoracic organs

Abdominal organs

Periphery (somatic regions - skin, muscle, etc.)

34
Q

What types of organs do paravertebral fibers target?

A

Thoracic organs and peripheral organs (mainly blood vessels and sweat glands)

35
Q

What type of organs do prevertebral fibers target?

A

Abdomino-pelvic organs

36
Q

What are the rami communicantes? (singular: ramus communicans)

A

Branches from the sympathtic chain ganglia that connect it to a spinal nerve.

37
Q

What are some key differences between white rami communicantes and grey rami communicantes?

A

White have preganglion fibers whereas grey have postganglion fibers.

White are found only in T1-L2, whereas grey connect to all pripheral nerves.

Also, white are (more) myelinated and grey are (less) myelinated.

38
Q

Describe how thoracic organs – e.g., heart and bronchial passages - are innervated.

A
  • supplied by visceral branches (e.g., sympathetic cardiac nerves)
  • postganglionic fibers
  • are medial branches of chain ganglia/sympathetic trunk
  • preganglionic fibers of this segment arise from T1-T4.
  • synapse in a paravertebral ganglion.
39
Q

Describe how abdominopelvic organs are innervated.

A
  • supplied by splanchnic nerves (arising from T5-L2)
  • contain preganglionic fibers from T5-L2
  • are medial branches of chain ganglia/sympathetic trunk
  • pass through the paravertebral ganglia without synapse, then synapse in a prevertebral ganglion
40
Q

Do all nerves carry postganglionic sympathetic fibers?

A

Yes, they sure do.

41
Q

Both sympathetic and parasympathetic pathways innervate organs within the body cavity, but what does the sympathetic pathway innervate that the parasympathetic does not?

A

The sympathetic pathway also supplies smooth muscle and glands in the periphery:

smooth muscle in blood vessels of the skin and skeletal muscles

arrector pili smooth muscles (make your hair stand on end)

sweat glands

42
Q

Summarize the sympathetic innervation of the periphery.

A
  • Cell bodies in the lateral horn of (T1-L2) supply preganglionic fibers for all parts of the body, from head to toe.
  • The postganglionic neurons are located in paravertebral (chain) ganglia in the cervical, thoracic, lumbar, and sacral regions
43
Q

Are visceral afferents part of the ANS?

A

No, but they travel with both the sympathetic and parasympathetic nerve pathways.

44
Q

Do visceral afferent fibers synapse in the paravertebral ganglia?

A

NO. They pass through without synapsing!

45
Q

Where are the cell bodies of visceral afferent fibers that travel with the sympathetic pathway?

A

In the spinal (dorsal root) ganglia associated with T1 - L2 spinal nerves.

46
Q

Where are the cell bodies of the afferent fibers that travel with the parasympathetic pathways?

A

In the spinal ganglia associated with S2 - S4 spinal nerves and in the sensory ganglia of the vagus nerve.

47
Q

Why is visceral pain is interpreted by the nervous system as coming from a somatic region? What is this called?

A

Visceral afferent ends in a segmental level of the spinal cord that also receives somatic afferents. This is called “referred pain.”

48
Q

What is a big, clinically relevant example of referred pain?

A

Heart attacks!

Pain from a heart attack, carried by visceral afferents to spinal cord segments T1-T4, is felt in somatic regions (the chest wall and arm) where afferents also project to the T1-T4 segments.

49
Q

Describe the output cell of the somatic reflex.

A

It’s a motor neuron that ends on skeletal muscle.

50
Q

Describe the efferent cells of the visceral reflex.

A

Two types: preganglionic and postganglionic.

The postganglionic cell can target a smooth muscle cell (never skeletal).

51
Q

Where are the cells in both somatic and visceral reflexes?

A

There is a spinal ganglion cell in the PNS, and an interneuron in the CNS.