Peripheral Nervous Systems
(Spinal and Cranial nerves, Autonomic Nervous System)
Chapter 13
I. Characteristics of spinal cord
A. ______
B. ______
C. ______
D. ______
E. ______
F. ______
G. Gray Matter
a. Looks like an ______in cross section
b. Contains:
1. posterior (______) horns – axons of sensory neurons and association neurons
2. Anterior (______) horns - cell bodies of somatic motor neurons
c. Amount of gray matter reflects amount of ______innervated at that level
H. Nerve Roots
a. Dorsal nerve root – carries incoming messages (______)
b. Ventral nerve root – carries outgoing messages (______)
- Dorsal and ventral roots join to form ______“spinal nerves”
- area of skin innervated by each spinal nerve = “______”
- muscle group innervated by each spinal nerve = “______”
K. White Matter
a. “Nerve tracts” of myelinated and unmyelinated fibers running in 3 directions:
1. Up (______;______)
2. Down (______;______)
3. side to side
L. Pathology
a. ______– loss of motor function
b. ______– loss of sensation
c. ______– loss of lower limb function
d. ______– loss of all limb function
e. ______– brain disorder resulting in loss of function on one side
f. ______– loss of muscle tone due to damage of ventral horn or root
g. ______– damage to brain neurons; muscles are stimulated by spinal
nerves
h. ______– “gray matter; inflammation” – ______disease which destroys the ______of the spinal cord; virus is contracted through contaminated ______; Salk and Sabin ______prevent infection
II. Peripheral Nervous System
A. Cranial Nerves
a. ______pair; only ______of which extends down into the body
b. Usually named for what they ______
c. Given ______numerals in the order in which they are located
d. ______(structural)
e. “______”
I – Olfactory - ______
II – Optic - ______
III – Oculomotor - ______
IV – Trochlear – ______
V – Trigeminal – ______
VI – abducens – ______
VII – facial – ______
VIII – vestibulochochlear – ______
IX – Glossopharyngeal – ______
X – Vagus – ______
XI – Accessory – ______
XII – Hypoglossal – ______
f. Cranial nerves can be ______,______,
or ______(both)
g. ______
B. Spinal Nerves
a. 31 pairs; all are ______nerves:
b. ______cervical
c. ______thoracic
d. ______lumbar
e. ______coccygeal
C. Spinal nerves leave the spinal cord, ______and then converge again to form a
complicated network called a “______”
a. Allows muscles to receive its nerve supply from ______
b. Therefore a damaged nerve does not lead to complete motor or sensory loss in the limb region
served
c. There are several major plexi:
1. ______– neck; phrenic nerve (diaphragm) is here
2. ______– upper limbs; radial nerve is the largest
3. ______– abdominal wall and thigh; femoral nerve is largest
4. ______– thigh and lower leg; sciatic nerve (largest and
longest nerve in body)
III. Reflexes
A. Reflexes are rapid, predictable motor responses to stimuli;______, ______, and ______; 2 kinds:
a. ______– skeletal muscle
b. ______– glands and involuntary muscle
B. Reflex arc contains 5 elements:
a. ______
b. ______neuron
c. ______– association neurons of spinal cord
d. ______
e. ______(muscle or gland)
C. Examples of reflexes:
- ______(deep tendon) reflex – coordinates muscle control of paired muscles (bicep/tricep); prevents over stretching, muscle tone
- ______(ankle jerk) reflex
- ______vs. ______reflex
d. ______(abdominal) reflex – initiated by actual or perceived painful event; prick finger, hot stove, punch to abdomen, etc.
e. ______reflex – complex; helps to maintain balance
f. ______reflex – initiated by gentle touch; Babinski sign
- ______reflex – protective
IV. Autonomic Nervous System
*Autonomic Nervous System – Responsible for the stability of the body’s ______(blood flow, respiration rate, body temperature change, etc.)
- Overview – Difference between somatic and autonomic
- ______:
1. ______= skeletal muscle
2. ______= cardiac & smooth muscle, glands
- ______;
1. Somatic = cell bodies are in the ______, axons ______which go to the ______; neurons are thick and myelinated
- Autonomic = chain of __ neurons; 1st neuron (preganglionic) in ______; 2nd neuron (postganglionic) in ______; fibers are thing and lightly myelinated
- Neurotransmitter effects:
1. Somatic – acetylcholine (______); effects are always ______
2. Autonomic = norepinephrine (______) (usually found in parasympathetic) effects depend on the type of receptor receiving the transmitter; it can be ______
or ______.
- Sympathetic vs. Parasympathetic – Generally serve the same organs, but cause ______effects
- ______- speed things up; emergencies which cause the heart to speed up, blood to be shunted during exercises, bronchioles to dilate, nutrients are pulled from the liver, etc. “______’
- ______- works to conserve body energy; unwind; active when the body is at rest; called the “______” system
- Homeostasis is maintained through the ______- action of these two.
- Anatomy
- ______- preganglionic sympathetic neurons arise from the T1-L2 vertebrae
b.______- preganglionic parasympathetic neurons arise from the brainstem (cranium) and sacrum (sacral) regions of the spinal cord.
- Physiology – Neurotransmitter and Receptor Action
- ______and ______are the major neurotransmitters
- Ach is secreted by all ______of the sympathetic and parasympathetic fibers and all ______of the parasympathetic = ______fibers.
- NE is secreted by all postganglionic fibers of the ______-- = ______(named after hormone adrenaline which produces the same effects)
- Receptors
1. ______receptors – named form drugs that bind and behave like ACh
i. ______(named after nicotine) = ______
effects; example are receptors on adrenal glands.
ii. ______(named after muscarine, a mushroom poison) =
______or ______depending on
where in the body; Ex: Ach binding to heart muscle will slow it down; Ach binding to
stomach muscle, sweat glands, intestines will speed them up.
- ______receptors – organs that respond to NE have one or both types of receptors
i. ______- generally excitatory; Ex: blood vessel constriction
ii. ______- generally inhibitory, except in the heart; Ex: dilates blood vessels &
bronchiole tubes, relaxes intestine
- Knowing the locations of these receptors and subclasses is helpful in ______design and use; current technology is to develop drugs that target one type of ______without interfering with all receptors body wide; in other words design a drug that targets just the nicotinic receptors and not the muscarinic receptors. Ex: ______- drugs that bind to and block 1 receptors of the heart without interfering with the 2 receptors of other organs.
- Interactions – both systems do not exhibit dual control; usually, both are partially activated and antagonistic; exceptions are:
i. ______- vasomotor constriction; thermoregulation and responses to heat (skin dilates), rennin (enzyme from kidneys that causes an increase in blood pressure), body cell metabolism increase, blood glucose levels
ii. ______- heart and digestive system
iii. Generally the ______effects are longer lasting (NE lasts longer); explains why we need time to “come down” after a stressful situation
- ANS Controls
a. Brain stem & spinal cord – heart & breathing rates via ______nerve, gastrointestinal motility, reflex arcs or the spinal cord
b. ______- blood pressure, body temperature, water balance, hunger, thirst, rage, etc.
c. ______- (cerebral cortex) – biofeedback & meditation
- Pathology
a. ______- intermittent attacks of vasoconstriction in the extremities usually as a result to exposure to cold = gangrene in some cases due to tissue death
b. ______- from stress, arteriosclerosis, renal disease
c. ______- envisioned as epilepsy of the spinal cord; common in quadra and paraplegics; occurs following injury when reflex action return in an exaggerated state (due to lack of inhibitions by higher centers); trigger is painful skin stimulation or overfilling of a visceral organ