4. Autonomic Nervous System Flashcards
What is the autonomic nervous system?
Branch of the peripheral nervous system innervating smooth muscle tissue, glands, organs whose activity is not under conscious control
Parasympathetic and sympathetic neurones are classified based on their origin from the CNS
Slides 3-4 Autonomic Nervous System
Where do parasympathetic and sympathetic nerves originate from?
Parasympathetic nerves originate from the medulla and sacral spinal cord
CRANIOSACRAL OUTFLOW
Sympathetic nerves originate from the thoracic and lumbar spinal cord
One fiber ends at ganglion and one fiber starts
THORACOLUMBAR OUTFLOW
Slide 5 autonomic nervous
What are the synapses where acetylcholine (ACh) is released? (6 of them)
- Preganglionic parasympathetic nerves at their ganglia
- Preganglionic sympathetic nerves at their ganglia and at their synapses in adrenal medulla
- Postganglionic parasympathetic nerves at their organ/tissue receptors
- Preganglionic sympathetic nerves at their synapses in adrenal medulla
- Somatic motor nerves at the neuromuscular junction in the skeletal muscles
- The postganglionic fibres of the sympathetic system innervating all sweat glands (except in palms), and skeletal blood vessels release ACh
Slides 6-8 autonomic nervous
What are the synapses where norepinephrine (NE) is released? (2 of them)
- Postganglionic sympathetic nerves at their organ/tissue receptors
- Sympathetic fibres innervating sweat glands in the palms (adrenergic sweating)
Slides 6-8 autonomic nervous
What are the 2 neurotransmitters and their proportions released from the adrenal medulla?
The adrenal medulla releases epinephrine (adrenaline) (80%) and norepinephrine (20%) into circulation when stimulated by preganglionic sympathetic nerves
Phaeochromocytoma- a tumor of the adrenal medulla that releases large amounts of Epi and NE into circulation which raises heart rate and BP
How is acetylcholine (ACh) synthesized?
What blocks ACh release?
Synthesized from choline and Acetyl coenzyme A
It is stored in neuronal vesicles, and released by nerve stimulation
Botulinum toxin blocks ACh release- causes skeletal muscle paralysis
Slide 10 autonomic nervous
How are dopamine, norepinephrine, and epinephrine synthesized?
All synthesized from the amino acid tyrosine
Slide 11 autonomic nervous system
How are cholinergic receptors broken down?
Slide 12 autonomic nervous system
Nicotinic and muscarinic
What are adrenergic receptor types?
What are adrenergic receptors stimulated by?
Stimulated by norepinephrine
Split into α1, α2, and β
β breaks down into β1 β2 β3
Slide 14 autonomic nervous system
What are the differences between parasympathetic functions and sympathetic functions?
Parasympathetic- rest and digest (relax)
Sympathetic- fight or flight (stressful)
Table on slide 16 autonomic nervous system
What is dominant tone?
The dominant tone in an organ means that the branch of ANS (parasympathetic or sympathetic) innervating that organ is dominant or more active
Drugs (especially antagonists) affecting the system which is dominant will have a more noticeable effect in that organ
How do ANS drugs and the heart work?
Dominant tone, parasympathetic sympathetic receptors, etc
Dominant tone- parasympathetic (except in ventricles)
Parasympathetic- Muscarinic M2
Agonists (ACh)- down heart rate and atrioventricular conduction
Antagonists (muscarinic blockers)- up heart rate and AC
Sympathetic- β1, β2
Agonists (NE, Epi, β1)- up heart rate, AC, contractility
Antagonists (β blockers)- down heart rate, AC, contractility
Slides 18-19 autonomic nervous system
How do ANS drugs and the blood vessels work?
Dominant tone, parasympathetic sympathetic receptors, etc
Dominant tone- sympathetic
Most blood vessels do not have cholinergic innervation
Parasympathetic- muscarinic M3
Agonists (ACh, muscarinic agonists)- down blood pressure (vasodilation)
Antagonists (muscarinic blockers)- little or no effect (no cholinergic innervation)
Sympathetic- α1
Agonists (NE, Epi, α agonists)- up contraction, vascular resistance, blood pressure
Antagonists (α blockers)- down vasodilation, vascular resistance, blood pressure
Slides 20-21 autonomic nervous
How do ANS drugs and the kidney work?
Dominant tone, parasympathetic sympathetic receptors, etc
Dominant tone- sympathetic
No cholinergic innervation
Sympathetic- β1
Agonists (NE, Epi, β1 agonists)- up renin secretion (which increases angiotensin and blood pressure)
Antagonists (β1 blockers)- down renin secretion (down angiotensin and blood pressure)
Slide 22 autonomic nervous
How do ANS drugs and the urinary bladder work?
Dominant tone, parasympathetic sympathetic receptors, etc
Dominant tone- parasympathetic (detrusor muscle)
Parasymp & symp in sphincter
Parasympathetic- muscarinic M3, M2
Nerve stimulation and agonists (ACh)- detrusor contraction (sphincter relax)
Antagonists (muscarinic blockers)- detrusor relax (sphincter contract)
Sympathetic- α1, β3
Nerve stimulation & agonists- relax detrusor (parasymp dominates tho), contract sphincter
Antagonists (α1 blockers)- relax sphincter