Intro to the Autonomic Nervous System Flashcards

1
Q

Parasympathetic nervous system distribution vs sympathetic

A

Parasympathetic-Limited to head, neck and trunk viscera, never in the body wall or extremities
Sympathetic- distributes to all vascular areas of the body

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2
Q

Glandular secretion controlled by

A

Parasympathetic nervous system, except sweat glands, the sympathetic nervous system can indirectly decrease non-sweat glandular secretion through vasoconstriction

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3
Q

Vasoconstriction controlled by

A

Sympathetic nervous system, except coronary artery

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4
Q

Typically parasympathetic stimulation is

A

Anabolic, normal function and energy conservation

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5
Q

Visceral distribution of Thoracolumbar T1-L2 sympathetic division supply what

A
Innervation to visceral structures; organs of the trunk
Heart, Lungs
Liver, Gallbladder
GI tract, Spleen 
Pancreas
Kidneys
Reproductive organs
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6
Q

Presynaptic fibers of thoracolumbar visceral sympathetic division

A

They are short
Cell bodies in lateral horn of spinal cord
Always travel in anterior root
Always travel into anterior ramus
Quickly exit anterior ramus and enter paravertebral ganglia

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7
Q

Synaptic options for presynaptic fibers of thoracolumbar visceral sympathetic division

A

They can enter paravertebral ganglion and synapse on postsynaptic neuron in same spinal level, or ascend or descend to postsynaptic neuron in different level, or exit PV ganglion without synapsing and continue on through an abdominopelvic splanchnic nerve on their way to a postsynaptic neuron in prevertebral ganglion

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8
Q

Postsynaptic fibers

A

Long

Cell bodies in paravertebral or prevertebral ganglia

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9
Q

Paravertebral ganglia

A

Linked vertically to form sympathetic trunks on either side of the vertebral column, three ganglia also exist in the cervical, lumbar and pelvic regions

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10
Q

Prevertebral ganglia

A

Surround the main unpaired branches of abdominal aorta

  • Celiac ganglion
  • Superior mesenteric ganglion
  • Aorticorenal ganglion
  • Inferior mesenteric ganglion
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11
Q

Parietal distribution supplies

A

Sympathetic innervation to smooth muscle of skin and blood vessels, sweat glands

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12
Q

Synaptic options for parietal distribution of presynaptic fibers in trunk vs head/neck/upper extremity

A

For trunk distribution: PS fibers can enter paravertebral ganglion and synapse at same level
For head, neck and upper extremity, PS fibers enter paravertebral ganglion at their own level then ascend to synapse on a postsynaptic neuron in the cervical sympathetic trunk

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13
Q

Synaptic options for parietal distribution of presynaptic fibers for perineum and lower extremity

A

PS fibers enter the paravertebral ganglion at their own level and then descend to synapse on a post synaptic neuron in the abdominal and sacral sympathetic trunk

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14
Q

Post synaptic fibers of parietal distribution- cell bodies exist where and exit that space through what

A

Paravertebral ganglia, exit via gray rami communicantes back into the somatic nerve

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15
Q

Path/trunk distribution of post synaptic fibers in back/posterior

A

Follow posterior rami of spinal nerves to innervate smooth muscle/sweat glands of back

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16
Q

Path/distribution of post synaptic fibers in anterior/lateral trunk

A

Follow anterior rami of spinal nerves, which for the trunk are the intercostal, thoracoabdominal and subcostal nerves

17
Q

Post synaptic parietal fibers distribution in head and face

A

Fibers follow carotid nerves and enter carotid periarterial plexus

18
Q

Post synaptic parietal fiber distribution in posterior neck

A

Follow posterior rami such as suboccipital, greater and least occipital

19
Q

Post synaptic parietal fiber distribution in anterior neck/upper extremity

A

Follow anterior rami of spinal nerves which for neck make up the cervical plexus and for upper extremity make up brachial plexus

20
Q

Post synaptic parietal fiber distribution in buttocks

A

Fibers follow posterior rami of spinal nerves called cluneal nerves

21
Q

Post synaptic parietal fiber distribution in perineum and lower extremity

A

Follow anterior rami of spinal nerves which make up lumbar and sacral plexuses

22
Q

Parasympathetic nervous system consists of which nerves

A

Craniosacral CN III (oculomotor), VII (facial), IX (glossopharyngeal) and X (vagus), S2-4

23
Q

Presynaptic fibers of PNS

A

Long
Nuclei in brain stem and sacral spinal levels
Cranial component exits as cranial nerves
Sacral components exit spinal levels as pelvic splanchnic nerves

24
Q

Post synaptic fibers of PNS

A

Usually short, with ganglia/postsynaptic neurons near or in the target organ

25
Q

Ciliary ganglion receives fibers from

A

Oculomotor nerve CN III

26
Q

Pterygopalatine ganglion receives fibers from

A

Facial nerve CN VII

27
Q

Submandibular ganglion receives fibers from

A

Facial nerve CN VII

28
Q

Otic ganglion receives fibers from

A

Glossopharyngeal nerve CN IX

29
Q

Intrinsic parasympathetic ganglia

A

These are postsynaptic parasympathetic cell bodies located in the walls of target organs

30
Q

Autonomic plexuses

A

Typically mixed sympathetic/parasympathetic plexuses that travel on the vasculature to carry the postsynaptic (for sympathetic division) and presynaptic (for parasympathetic division) to the target organ

31
Q

Plexuses located in the thorax

A

Pulmonary
Cardiac
Aortic
Esophageal

32
Q

Plexuses located in the abdomen

A
Celiac
Hepatic
Superior mesenteric
Renal
Intermesenteric
Inferior mesenteric
Superior hypogastric
33
Q

Plexuses located in the pelvis

A

Inferior hypogastric (pelvic) plexus
Vesical plexus
Uterovaginal plexus
Prostatic plexus