Sympathetic Parasympathetic
The
Sympathetic Nervous System
The preganglionic motor neurons of the sympathetic
system (shown in black) arise in the spinal cord. They pass into
sympathetic ganglia which
are organized into two chains that run parallel to and on either side of the
spinal cord.
The preganglionic neuron may do one of three things in the
sympathetic ganglion:
synapse with postganglionic neurons (shown in
white) which then reenter the spinal nerve and ultimately pass out to the sweat
glands and the walls of blood vessels near the surface of the body.
pass up or down the sympathetic chain and finally synapse
with postganglionic neurons in a higher or lower ganglion
leave the ganglion by way of a cord leading to special
ganglia (e.g. the solar plexus) in the viscera. Here it may synapse with
postganglionic sympathetic neurons running to the smooth muscular walls of the
viscera. However, some of these preganglionic neurons pass right on through
this second ganglion and into the adrenal
medulla. Here they synapse with the highly-modified postganglionic
cells that make up the secretory portion of the adrenal medulla.
The neurotransmitter of the preganglionic sympathetic
neurons is acetylcholine (ACh).
It stimulates action potentials in the postganglionic neurons.
The neurotransmitter released by the postganglionic neurons
is noradrenaline (also
called norepinephrine).
The action of noradrenaline on a particular gland or muscle
is excitatory is some cases, inhibitory in others. (At excitatory
terminals, ATP may
be released along with noradrenaline.)
The release of noradrenalinestimulates heartbeatraises blood
pressuredilates the pupilsdilates the trachea and
bronchistimulates the conversion of liver glycogen into
glucoseshunts blood away from the skin and viscera to the skeletal
muscles, brain, and heartinhibits peristalsis in the gastrointestinal (GI) tractinhibits contraction of the bladder and rectumand, at least in rats and mice, increases the number
of AMPA
receptors in the hippocampus and thus increases long-term
potentiation (LTP).
In short, stimulation of the sympathetic branch of the
autonomic nervous system prepares the body for emergencies: for "fight or
flight" (and, perhaps, enhances the memory of the event that triggered the
response).
Activation of the sympathetic system is quite general
because
a single preganglionic neuron usually synapses with many
postganglionic neurons;the release of adrenaline from the adrenal
medulla into the blood ensures that all the cells of the body
will be exposed to sympathetic stimulation even if no postganglionic neurons
reach them directly.
The Parasympathetic Nervous System
The main nerves of the parasympathetic system are the tenth
cranial nerves, the vagus nerves. They originate in
the medulla oblongata. Other preganglionic parasympathetic neurons also
extend from the brain as well as from the lower tip of the spinal cord.
Each preganglionic parasympathetic neuron synapses with just
a few postganglionic neurons, which are located near — or in — the effector
organ, a muscle or gland. Acetylcholine (ACh) is the neurotransmitter
at all the pre- and many of the postganglionic neurons of the parasympathetic
system. However, some of the postganglionic neurons release nitric oxide
(NO) as their neurotransmitter.
The Nobel Prize-winning physiologist Otto Loewi discovered
(in 1920) that the effect of both sympathetic and parasympathetic stimulation
is mediated by released chemicals. He removed the living heart from a frog with
its sympathetic and parasympathetic nerve supply intact. As expected,
stimulation of the first speeded up the heart while stimulation of the second
slowed it down.
Loewi found that these two responses would occur in a second
frog heart supplied with a salt solution taken from the stimulated heart.
Electrical stimulation of the vagus nerve leading to the first heart not only
slowed its beat but, a short time later, slowed that of the second heart also.
The substance responsible was later shown to be acetylcholine. During
sympathetic stimulation, adrenaline (in the frog) is released.
Parasympathetic stimulation causesslowing down of the heartbeat (as Loewi demonstrated)lowering of blood pressureconstriction of the pupilsincreased blood flow to the skin and visceraperistalsis of the GI tract
In short, the parasympathetic system returns the body
functions to normal after they have been altered by sympathetic stimulation. In
times of danger, the sympathetic system prepares the body for violent activity.
The parasympathetic system reverses these changes when the danger is over.
The vagus nerves also help keep inflammation under
control. Inflammation stimulates nearby sensory neurons of the vagus. When
these nerve impulses reach the medulla oblongata, they are relayed back along
motor fibers to the inflamed area. The acetylcholine from the motor neurons
suppresses the release of inflammatory cytokines, e.g., tumor
necrosis factor (TNF), from macrophages in the inflamed tissue.
Although the autonomic nervous system is considered to be
involuntary, this is not entirely true. A certain amount of conscious control
can be exerted over it as has long been demonstrated by practitioners of Yoga
and Zen Buddhism. During their periods of meditation, these people are clearly
able to alter a number of autonomic functions including heart rate and the rate
of oxygen consumption. These changes are not simply a reflection of decreased
physical activity because they exceed the amount of change occurring during
sleep or hypnosis.
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