Lecture 3 - ANS - The ganglion and adrenergic synaptic transmission Flashcards
What is the CNS made up of?
Brain and spinal cord
What nerves is the peripheral nervous system made up of and what does it do?
Cranial Nerves (12 pairs of cranial nerves)
Spinal Nerves (31 pairs of spinal nerves)
Convey signals between the CNS and the tissues
Role of the ANS
Subconscious control of organs and homeostasis
Controls all outputs from CNS to the body except somatic motor innervation (to skeletal muscle)
What does the ANS do in cardiovascular regulation?
Control of HR
Contraction and relaxation of smooth muscle in blood vessels and organs
Regulation of glandular secretion
Metabolism
Name the two neurones in the two neutron system
Pre and post ganglionic
Describe the preganglionic neuron
Cell body is in the CNS
Small diameter and myelinated
Synapses at the autonomic ganglia
Preganglionic fibre releases Ach
Ace acts on nicotinic receptors on the post synaptic neuron
Describe the postganglionic neuron
Cell body in autonomic ganglion
Small diameter, unmyelinated
Synapses close to target organ
Describe the autonomic ganglion
Interface between the pre and post-ganglionic neurones of the autonomic nervous system in both sympathetic and parasympathetic branches
What are the physiological consequences of ganglionic nicotinic receptor stimulation?
Sympathetic and parasympathetic post-synaptic nerve activation
Secretion of adrenaline from the adrenal medulla
Sympathetic responses dominate
Stimulation of all peripheral ganglia:
Tachycardia
Increased in BP
Increased secretions
Increased adrenaline into the blood
Name ganglionic blocking drugs
Hexamethonium - non depolarising nicotinic antagonist - no clinical uses - historically used as an hypertensive
Local anaesthetics - sympathetic ganglion block - blocks sympathetically mediated pain pathways
How are transmitters synthesised
Postganglionic fibres send axons to target organs
Enzymes involved in transmitter synthesis are made in the cell body
Synthetic enzymes transported to nerve terminals
Transmitter made at terminal varicosities
What do most postsynaptic fibres release?
Noradrenaline
How is noradrenaline synthesised?
Initial stages of synthesis in the cytoplasm
Final stages of synthesis on the membrane of synaptic vesicle
Precursor molecules are the amino acid L-tyrosine
Final Product NA - regulates synthesis via negative feedback process on initial step of synthesis
Describe how guanethidine inhibits release of NA
Substrate for NET and VMAT - accumulates in vesicles, stabilises vesicles, displaces NA (slowly), free NA metabolised by MAO
High doses - destroys neuron
Overal effect - block of adrenergic neurones
Used as a antihypertensive
Describe how Reserpine inhibits release of NA
Inhibits VMAT, prevents transport of NA into vesicles, cytoplasmic NA metabolised by MAO, Vesicular levels fall
Used as a antihypertensive