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THE AUTONOMIC NERVOUS SYSTEM (ANS)

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THE AUTONOMIC NERVOUS SYSTEM (ANS) What is the autonomic nervous system? The autonomic nervous system (ANS) is the motor division of the peripheral nervous system ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: THE AUTONOMIC NERVOUS SYSTEM (ANS)


1
THE AUTONOMIC NERVOUS SYSTEM (ANS)
2
What is the autonomic nervous system?
  • The autonomic nervous system (ANS) is the motor
    division of the peripheral nervous system that
    controls visceral activities, with the goal of
    maintaining internal homeostasis.

3
What does the autonomic nervous system do?
  • It provides motor fibers to smooth and cardiac
    muscles and glands
  • It operates subconsciously
  • It causes excitation and inhibition
  • It makes adjustments to support body activities
  • It has an efferent pathway made up of a
    two-neuron chain preganglionic and ganglionic

4
Two divisions of the ANS
  • 1) Parasympathetic division
  • 2) Sympathetic
  • Although they have different roles, they have
    effects on many of the same organs of the body

5
Organs affected by both divisions
6
Roles of the two different divisions
  • 1. The parasympathetic division
  • _conserves body energy and maintains body
    activities at basal levels
  • _is involved in digestion, diuresis, and
    defecation
  • _causes heart rate and blood pressure to be low,
    the skin to be warm and the pupils to be
    constricted

7
  • 2. The sympathetic division
  • _activates the body under conditions of emergency
    which is why it is often called the fight or
    flight system
  • _is involved in emergency, exercise, and
    excitement
  • _causes blood flow to organs to reduce and blood
    flow to muscles to increase
  • _also causes skin to be cold, heart rate to
    increase, and rapid breathing

8
Parasympathetic division outflow
  • Neurons of the cranial and sacral outflows of the
    parasympathetic division are located in the
    following nerves and create an effect on the
    organs mentioned in the table below.

9
Table of parasympathetic outflow
10
Parasympathetic division outflow
11
Sympathetic division outflow
  • Sympathetic division outflow is different from
    parasympathetic division outflow because
  • It arises from spinal cord segments T1 through L2
  • Preganglionic fibers pass through the white rami
    communicantes and synapse in the chain
    (paravertebral) ganglia
  • Fibers from T5-L2 form splanchnic nerves and
    synapse with collateral ganglia
  • Postganglionic fibers innervate the numerous
    organs of the body
  • Sympathetic neurons produce the lateral horns of
    the spinal cord

12
Sympathetic division outflow
13
ANS PhysiologyNeurotransmitters and Receptors
  • The two major neurotransmitter involved in the
    ANS are
  • Acetylcholine (ACh)
  • Norepinephrine (NE)
  • ACh is the same neurotransmitter that is found in
    the somatic motor neurons and is released in the
    ANS
  • All ANS preganglionic axons
  • All parasympathetic postganglionic axons at
    synapses with their effectors
  • ACh releasing fibers are called Cholinergic
    Fibers
  • NE is released by most sympathetic postganglionic
    axons
  • NE releasing fibers are called Adrenergic Fibers
  • The effects of ACh and NE are either excitation
    or inhibition which is dependant on the receptor
    type allowing them to exert these different
    effects at different areas in the body

14
Receptors
  • ACh binds to two types of receptors
  • Nicotinic
  • Muscarine
  • Nicotinic Receptors are located on
  • Motor end plates of skeletal muscles (somatic
    targets)
  • All ganglionic neurons (sypathetic and
    parasympathetic)
  • The hormone-producing cells of the adrenal
    medulla
  • ACh always produces a stimulatory effect when it
    binds with nicotinic receptors
  • Muscarine Receptors occur on all effector cells
    stimulated by postganglionic cholinergic fibers
    (parasympathetic targets like the eccrine sweat
    glands and some blood vessels of skeletal muscle)
  • ACh binding produces a inhibitory or excitatory
    depending on the receptor type of the target
    organ

15
Receptors
  • There are also receptors know as Adrenergic
    Receptors (two types)
  • Alpha with two subtypes (A1,A2)
  • Beta with three subtypes (B1,B2,B3)
  • The general effects of NE binding are
  • Alpha receptors are mostly stimulatory
  • Beta receptors are mostly inhibitory
  • However, an exception to this is when NE binds to
    the Beta receptors of cardiac muscle and the
    result is stimulatory

16
Overview of the location and effects of receptor
subclasses
17
Drugs and the ANS
  • Knowing the locations of the cholinergic and
    adrenergic receptors subtypes allows specific
    drugs to be prescribed to obtain the desired
    inhibitory or stimulatory effect on selected
    organs
  • An example of this is Atropine (blocks
    parasympathetic effects)
  • administered during surgery to prevent salivation
    and dry up respiratory secretions
  • Ophthalmologists use it to dilate the pupils for
    an eye exam
  • There are several examples of drugs in Table 14.4
    that influence the Activity of the ANS on page
    544

18
Interactions of the Autonomic Divisions
  • Most visceral organs receive innervation by both
    sympathetic and parasympathtic fibers
  • This dual innervation produces a dynamic
    antagonism that allows visceral activity to be
    precisely controlled
  • Sympathetic fibers increase heart and respiratory
    rates. They also inhibit digestion and
    elimination
  • Parasympathetic fibers allow for digestion and
    elimination and decrease respiratory and heart
    rates

19
Parasympathetic Sympathetic
  • The parasympathetic division is know as the
    resting and digesting division
  • The sympathetic division controls blood pressure
    and keeps the blood vessels in a continual state
    of partial constriction
  • Flight or Fright response the sympathetic can
    override the parasympathetic in an emergency to
    increase heart and respiratory rates while
    inhibiting digestion.
  • Parasympathetic division restores the heart and
    respiratory rates back to resting levels when the
    emergency is over and then returns back to its
    functions of digestion and elimination

20
Sympathetic Tone Parasympathetic Tone
  • The Sympathetic Tone
  • Constricts blood vessels controls blood
    pressure to rise in response to the bodys needs
  • Prompts vessels to dilate if blood pressure needs
    to be decreased
  • The Parasympathetic Tone
  • Slows the heart
  • Controls Digestion and Elimination
  • ANS control is best seen in the external
    genitalia
  • Parasympathetic fibers cause vasodilation
    resulting in the erection of the penis and
    clitoris
  • Sympathetic fibers cause ejaculation of sperm and
    reflex peristalsis in females

21
Sympathetic Division
  • The adrenal medulla, sweat glands and the
    arrector pili muscles of the skin, the kidneys,
    and most blood vessels receive only sympathetic
    fibers.
  • The Sympathetic Division controls
  • Thermoregulatory Responses to heat
  • Release of Renin from the kidneys
  • Metabolic Effects

22
Control of Autonomic Functions
  • Autonomic functions are controlled by several
    factors
  • Reflex Activities mediated by the Spinal Cord and
    Brain Stem (Medullary Center)
  • Hypothalamic integration centers interact with
    both higher and lower centers of autonomic,
    somatic, and endocrine response
  • Cortical centers influence autonomic functioning
    via connections with the limbic system conscious
    controls are rare but maybe learned via
    biofeedback training
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