Chapter 13 - Physiology of the Peripheral Nervous System Flashcards

1
Q

The divisions of the nervous system…

A

CNS - brain and spinal cord.
PNS - Somatic, Autonomic.
Autonomic goes to…Parasympathetic and Sympathetic.

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2
Q

The 3 Regulatory functions of the Autonomic Nervous System –

A

Regulation of heart, Regulation of secretory glands (salivary, gastric, sweat, and bronchial glands) and regulation of smooth muscles (muscles of bronchi, blood vessels, urino genital systems, and gastrointestinal tract.)

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3
Q

Main functions of the sympathetic nervous system -

A

increase energy, regulation of cardiovascular system (increase), regulation of body temp, fight or flight.

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4
Q

Parasympathetic Nervous System – regulator functions affect…

A

heart rate (decrease), gastric secretions (increase digestion), bladder and bowel (increase emptying), vision (constriction of pupil; for near vision.), and bronchial smooth muscle (contraction.)

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5
Q

Most organs are innvervated by both…

A

The parasympathetic and sympathetic systems.

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6
Q

Balance by opposition - def

A

most common, like heart rate - decreased by parasympathetic, increased by sympathetic nerves.

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7
Q

Complementary control -

A

increase overall response or complement each other - erection is mediated by parasympathetic response while ejaculation is controlled by sympathetic nerves. This is very rare - less than 1%.

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8
Q

Innervations and regulation by only one of the two branches. -

A

Blood vessels are innervated only by sympathetic nerves.

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9
Q

BP is never done by Sympathetic Nerves. T/F?

A

FALSE. It is always.

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10
Q

2 Mechanisms that regulate autonomic nervous systems.

A

Feedback regulation (reflex, like baroreceptors) and Autonomic Tone (means steady state, basal level, level of tone.)

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11
Q

The Autonomic tone is controlled by both systems. T/F?

A

False. It is controlled by one, not both.

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12
Q

Parasympathetic sites of drug action -

A

synapses between pre-ganglionic and post ganglionic neurons.

Junctions between post-ganglionic neurons and effector organs.

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13
Q

Sympathetic sites of drug actions -

A

synapses between pre-ganglionic and post ganglionic neurons.

Junctions between post-ganglionic neurons and effector organs.

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14
Q

Only __ neuron and site of drug action is the neuromuscular junction.

A

1

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15
Q

Principal neurotransmitters of the PNS are…

A

Acetylcholine, Norepinephrine, Epinephrine. Dopamine is also a PNS neurotransmitter, but its role is not demonstrated conclusively.

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16
Q

Acetylcholine is released by…

A

all pre-ganglionic neurons of PS nerves, all post ganglionic neurons of PS system, by all pre-ganglionic neurons of the Symp system, most post ganglionic neurons of the Symp system that go to sweat glands, and all motor neurons to skeletal muscles.

17
Q

Norepinephrine is released by…

A

All post ganglionic neurons of sympathetic system, except Sweat gland nerves, which release acetylcholine at junction.

18
Q

Epinephrine - released by…

A

major transmitter released by adrenal medulla.

19
Q

Cholinergic - def

A

mediated by acetylcholine -

20
Q

Adrenergic - def

A

mediated by norepinephrine and epinephrine. Think “adrenaline.”

21
Q

What are the 3 cholinergic receptors?

A

Nicotinic N (neuronal), Nicotinic M (muscle), and Muscarinic (everything else.)

22
Q

What are the 3 adrenergic receptors?

A

Alpha 1 & Alpha 2, Beta 1 & Beta 2, Dopamine

23
Q

Nicotinic N (Neuronal) - def

A

promotes ganglia transmission, promotes release of epinephrine

24
Q

Nicotinic M (Muscle) - def

A

contraction of skeletal muscle.

25
Q

Muscarinic - def

A

activates parasympathetic nervous system.

26
Q

Alpha 1 - Function

A

Vasoconstriction, Ejaculation, Contraction of bladder neck and prostate.

27
Q

Alpha 2 - function

A

Located in pre-synaptic junction, minimal clinical significant.

28
Q

Beta 1 - Function

A

Heart - increases heart rate, force of contraction, velocity of conduction in AV node, Kidney - renin release.

29
Q

Beta 2 - function -

A

bronchial dilation, relaxation of uterine muscle, vasodilation, glycogenolysis (splitting up of glycogen yielding glucose.)

30
Q

Dopamine - function

A

dilates renal blood vessel.

31
Q

Life cycle of ACh -

A

synthesis of ACh from choline+acetylcoenzyme A. Stored in vesicles, release, binds to cholingeric receptors, destroyed almost instantly by acetylcholinesterase, choline released as end product and recycled back into nerves for synthesis (not acetyl co-A.)

32
Q

Drugs act at several points of the ACH life cycle -

A

botulism blocks Ach release, action at receptor level to block or mimic Ach, inhibition of ACHE (ach accumulates in junction!)

33
Q

Life cycle of Norepinephrine -

A

synthesis of norepinephrine within vesicles, stored, released, binds to adrenergic receptors, termination by reuptake of norepinephrine back into nerve terminal; following uptake norepinephrine goes under 2 processes - 1. Uptake into vesicle for reuse, 2. Inactivation by monoamine oxidase (MAO - an enzyme found in nerve terminals.)

34
Q

Drugs act at ____ of the life cycle of NE -

A

each life step.