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Sympathetic nervous system


 

The sympathetic nervous system (SNS) is one half of the autonomic nervous system; the parasympathetic nervous system (PNS) is the other.

Related Topics:
Sympathetic nervous system - Autonomic nervous system - Parasympathetic nervous system

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The sympathetic nervous system activates what is often termed the "fight or flight response". This response is also known as sympathico-adrenal response of the body, as the pre-ganglionic sympathetic fibers that end in the adrenal medulla (but also all other sympathetic fibers) secrete acetylcholine, which activates the secretion of epinephrine and to a lesser extent norepinephrine from it. Therefore this response that acts primarily on the cardiovascular system is mediated directly via impulses transmitted through the sympathetic nervous system and indirectly via catecholamines secreted from the adrenal medulla.

Related Topics:
Fight or flight response - Pre-ganglionic - Adrenal medulla - Acetylcholine - Epinephrine - Norepinephrine - Cardiovascular system - Catecholamines

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Western science typically looks at the SNS as an automatic regulation system, that is, one that operates without the intervention of conscious thought. Some evolutionary theorists suggest that the sympathetic nervous system operated in early man to maintain human survival (Origins of Consciousness, Robert Ornstein; et al.), as the sympathetic nervous system is responsible for priming the body for action.

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The sympathetic nerves run parallel to the spinal cord on both sides of the vertebral column. Sympathetic nerves branch off from these main nerve chains and smaller branches travel into the spinal cord and beyond into major organs, glands, and other groupings of nerves (sometimes called ganglia).

Related Topics:
Spinal cord - Vertebral column - Organs - Glands - Ganglia

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Messages travel through the SNS in a bidirectional flow. Efferent messages can trigger changes in different parts of the body simultaneously. For example, the sympathetic nervous system can accelerate heart rate, widen bronchial passages, decrease motility (movement) of the large intestine, constrict blood vessels, cause pupil dilation, activate goose bumps, start sweating and raise blood pressure.

Related Topics:
Efferent - Heart rate - Bronchial - Motility - Large intestine - Blood vessels - Pupil - Dilation - Goose bumps - Sweating - Blood pressure

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Cells of the SNS originate toward the middle of the spinal column, intermediolateral cell column, near the thoracic vertebrae, numbers 1 through 12 (T1-T12). This is where the parts of the nerves that have not yet run through a ganglion (pre-ganglionic cell bodies) are located.

Related Topics:
Intermediolateral cell column - Thoracic - Ganglion

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Axons (the largest "tentacle" of a nerve cell) leave the spinal cord and synapse (connect, with a space in between) onto the sympathetic chain ganglion; some axons leaving the sympathetic chain then synapse on their destination organs.

Related Topics:
Axons - Synapse

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The first synapse (in the sympathetic chain) is mediated by nicotinic receptors physiologically activated by acetylcholine, and the target synapse is mediated by adrenergic receptors physiologically activated by either norepinephrine or epinephrine. An exception is with sweat glands which receive sympathetic innervation but have muscarinic acetylcholine receptors which are normally characteristic of the PNS. Another exception is with certain deep muscle blood vessels, which have acetylcholine receptors and which dilate (rather than constrict) with an increase in sympathetic tone.

Related Topics:
Nicotinic - Acetylcholine - Adrenergic - Muscarinic

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