L21 Flashcards
explain the autonomic nervous system + its 2 divisions
- Controls
○ Blood pressure
○ Heart/breathing rate
○ Body temp.
○ Digestion
○ Metabolism- Has 2 divisions, are usually antagonistic to each other
○ Sympathetic
§ Fight or flight
§ leads to increased alertness + metabolism for a emergency○ Parasympathetic
§ Rest + digest
slows down most body activities
- Has 2 divisions, are usually antagonistic to each other
explain the somatic nervous system
○ Sensory (touch, pain, temp., sight) + motor neurons (skeletal muscle)
○ Conscious perception + voluntary control
○ Has 1 motor neuron
○ The myelinated axon of a single somatic motor neurons extends from the central nervous system to the skeletal muscle fibre it innervates (using Ach, receptor = nicotinic/ligand fated ion channel)
Motor neurons involved in the the autonomic nervous system
○ Has 2 motor neurons in series
○ 1st preganglionic neuron has its cell body in the CNS
○ Axon extends to an autonomic ganglion
2nd neuron has its unmyelinated axon extending from the ganglion to the effector (smooth/cardiac muscle + glands)
//steps of the sympathetic autonomic motor pathway
- Goes from spinal cord- preganglionic neuron
- Preganglionic fibre
- Sympathetic ganglion (ach at nicotinic receptors)
○ Vertebral chain ganglia
○ Pre-vertebral chain ganglia - Postganglionic fibre
- Goes to NA adrenergic receptors of effector (e.g. Glands, heart, urinary bladder)
explain the sympathetic nervous system
- Preganglionic neurons send out fibres in the 12 thoracic + first 2/3 lumbar segments
- Preganglionic fibres are short with postganglionic being longer
Can accelerate heart rate, constrict blood vessels, pupil dilation, activate goose bumps
- Preganglionic fibres are short with postganglionic being longer
//steps of the parasympathetic autonomic motor pathway
- Goes from spinal cord- preganglionic neuron
- Preganglionic fibre
- parasympathetic ganglion (ach at nicotinic receptors)
- Postganglionic fibre
- Goes to Ach at muscarinic receptors of effector (e.g. Glands, heart, urinary bladder)
explain the parasympathetic nervous system
- Cell bodies of the preganglionic neurons send out fibres at the brainstem + the sacral segments of 2-4 of the spinal cord
- Preganglionic fibres longer, with postganglionic being shorter (often inside the target organ)
Stimulates production of saliva, making tears
- Preganglionic fibres longer, with postganglionic being shorter (often inside the target organ)
explain ANS neurotransmitters + receptors
- Based on the neurotransmitter they produce + release, so are either cholinergic or adrenergic
- Cholinergic- releases Ach, binds to either nicotinic or muscarinic receptors
Adrenergic neurons release noradrenaline, which binds onto adrenergic receptors (alpha and/or beta)
- Cholinergic- releases Ach, binds to either nicotinic or muscarinic receptors
explain pre-ganglionic neurons
○ Ach
○ Nicotinic receptors
Shorter in sympathetic, longer in parasympathetic
explain post-ganglionic neurons
○ Parasympathetic
§ Ach
§ Muscarinic receptors
○ Sympathetic
§ Noradrenaline
§ Alpha + beta receptors
Longer in sympathetic, shorter in parasympathetic
explain the 2 alpha receptors
- Alpha 1 receptors- vasoconstriction + increased liver glucose production
Alpha 2 receptors- decreased insulin, vasodilation,, inhibitory responses for GI
explain the 3 beta receptors
- Beta 1 receptors- increased heart rate, increased heart contractility, increased renin release
- B2 receptors- increased lipolysis (fat breakdown), increased liver glucose production, smooth muscle relaxation, bronchodilation
B3 receptors- increased lipolysis, increased glycogen breakdown
- B2 receptors- increased lipolysis (fat breakdown), increased liver glucose production, smooth muscle relaxation, bronchodilation
explain the effects of muscarinic receptors
- Increased insulin/glucagon secretion
- Increased GI activity
- Erection
- Vasodilation
- Decreased heart rate
Decreased contractility
explain the nervous system and homeostasis
- Involved in maintaining homeostasis
reflex arc
Main integration centre for ANS reflexes is the hypothalamus
//explain the regulation of the autonomic nervous system
- Cerebral cortex (frontal lobe)
- Limbic lobe (emotional input)
- Hypothalamus (‘boss’ of system)
- Reticular formation of brain stem (regulation of pupil size, respiration, heart, blood pressure)
Spinal cord (urination, defecation, erection)