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Peripheral Nervous System

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Presentation on theme: "Peripheral Nervous System"— Presentation transcript:

1 Peripheral Nervous System
Spinal Cord Reflexes Peripheral Nervous System

2 Spinal Cord Anatomy Extends from the foramen magnum of the skull to the first or second lumbar vertebra Provides a two-way conduction pathway from the brain to and from the brain 31 pairs of spinal nerves arise from the spinal cord Cauda equina is a collection of spinal nerves at the inferior end

3 Spinal Cord Anatomy

4 Spinal Cord Internal Anatomy

5 Spinal Cord Internal Anatomy

6 Spinal Cord Input/Output

7 Spinal Nerves 31 left-right pairs of spinal nerves emerge from the cord at regular intervals (called segments). Except for the first cervical pair the spinal nerves leave the vertebral column from the intervertebral foramen between adjoining vertebrae – the first pair leaves between the skull and the first cervical vertebrae . Cervical – 8 pairs, C1-C8 Thoracic – 12 pairs, T1-T12 Lumbar – 5 pairs, L1-L5 Sacral - 5 pairs, S1-S5 Coccygeal – 1 nerve pair

8 Cervical Plexus

9 Brachial Plexus

10 Lumbar Plexus

11 Sacral plexus

12 Dermatomes

13 Sensory and Motor Tracts

14 Reflex Arc

15 Stretch Reflex

16 Tendon Reflex

17 Withdrawal Reflex

18 Crossed Extensor Reflex

19 Peripheral Nervous System (PNS)
somatic (SNS) sensory motor autonomic (ANS) motor parasympathetic sympathetic

20 PNS: Autonomic Nervous System
Motor subdivision of the PNS Consists only of motor nerves Also known as the involuntary nervous system Regulates activities of cardiac and smooth muscles and glands Two subdivisions Sympathetic division Parasympathetic division

21 PNS: Differences Between Somatic and Autonomic Nervous Systems
Somatic Nervous System Autonomic Nervous System Nerves One-neuron; it originates in the CNS and axons extend to the skeletal muscles served Two-neuron system consisting of preganglionic and postganglionic neurons Effector organ Skeletal muscle Smooth muscle, cardiac muscle, glands Subdivisions None Sympathetic and parasympathetic Neurotransmitter Acetylcholine Acetylcholine, epinephrine, norepinephrine

22 PNS: Differences Between Somatic and Autonomic Nervous Systems
Central nervous system Peripheral nervous system Effector organs Somatic nervous system Sympathetic division Autonomic nervous system Parasympathetic KEY: Preganglionic axons (sympathetic) Postganglionic Myelination (parasympathetic) Acetylcholine Epinephrine and norepinephrine Blood vessel Adrenal medulla Ganglion Norepinephrine Skeletal muscle Smooth muscle (e.g., in stomach) Glands Cardiac

23 PNS: Parasympathetic Division
Preganglionic neurons originate from the craniosacral regions: The cranial nerves III, VII, IX, and X S2 through S4 regions of the spinal cord Due to site of preganglionic neuron origination, the parasympathetic division is also known as the craniosacral division Terminal ganglia are at the effector organs Neurotransmitter: acetylcholine

24 PNS: Sympathetic Division
Preganglionic neurons originate from T1 through L2 Ganglia are at the sympathetic trunk (near the spinal cord) Short pre-ganglionic neuron and long post-ganglionic neuron transmit impulse from CNS to the effector Neurotransmitters: norepinephrine and epinephrine (effector organs)

25 Parasympathetic Eye Salivary glands Heart Lungs Cervical Stomach Thoracic T1 Pancreas Liver and gall- bladder L1 Lumbar Bladder Genitals Pelvic splanchnic nerves Sacral nerves (S2 – S4) Adrenal gland Liver and gall- Sympathetic Skin Brain stem Cranial ganglia

26 PNS: Autonomic Functioning
Sympathetic—“fight or flight” Response to unusual stimulus Takes over to increase activities Remember as the “E” division Exercise, excitement, emergency, and embarrassment Parasympathetic—“housekeeping” activites Conserves energy Maintains daily necessary body functions Remember as the “D” division digestion, defecation, and diuresis

27 Peripheral Nervous System
Flow to the CNS Flow out of the CNS

28 Peripheral Nervous System
Integration occurs at many locations along the pathway. stimulus - environmental change sensation - awareness of stimulus perception - interpretation of the meaning of the stimulus

29 Sensory Modalities General senses: somatic and visceral Special senses
smell,hearing/equilibrium taste, vision, and hearing

30 Classification of Sensory Receptors
Structural classification Type of response to a stimulus Type of stimuli they detect

31 Structural Classification of Receptors

32 Classification by Location
1. Exteroceptors 2. Interoceptors 3. Proprioceptors

33 Classification by Stimuli Detected
1. Mechanoreceptors 2. Thermoreceptors 3. Photoreceptors 4. Chemoreceptors Nociceptors Osmoreceptors

34 Adaptation Adaptation - generator potential or receptor potential decreases in amplitude during a maintained stimulus. Rapidly adapting - e.g. pressure, touch, smell Slowly adapting - e.g. pain, body position

35 Somatic Sensations Tactile Pain Thermal Proprioceptive
touch, pressure,vibration, itch and tickle Pain fast and slow Thermal warm and cold Proprioceptive muscle spindles, tendon organs, joint receptors

36 Sensory Receptors

37 Pain Sensations Nocicceptors = pain receptors
Free nerve endings found in every tissue of body except the brain Stimulated by excessive distension, muscle spasm & ischemia Tissue injury releases chemicals such as kinins, or prostaglandins Little adaptation occurs

38 Types of Pain Fast Pain (acute) Slow Pain (chronic)
occurs rapidly after stimuli (0.1 sec) sharp pain like needle puncture or cut not felt in deeper tissues Slow Pain (chronic) begins more slowly & increases in intensity aching or throbbing pain of toothache in superficial and deep tissues

39 Referred Pain Visceral pain felt just deep to the skin overlying the stimulated organ or in a surface far from the organ Skin area & organ are served by same segment of the spinal cord.

40 Pain Relief - Analgesia
Aspirin and ibuprofen block formation of prostaglandins that stimulate nociceptors Novocaine blocks conduction of nerve impulses along pain fibers Morphine lessens the perception of pain in the brain

41 Receptors - Summary

42 Stages of Sleep Nonrapid eye movement (NREM) Rapid eye movement (REM)

43 Learning and Memory Learning is the ability to acquire new information or skills through instruction or experience. Memory is the process by which information acquired through learning is stored and retrieved. Immediate memory- recall for a few seconds. Short-term memory- temporary ability to recall. Long-term memory- more permanent. Memory consolidation.


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