Peripheral Nervous System
Peripheral Nervous System
Peripheral Nervous System
8 cervical,
12 thoracic,
5 lumbar,
5 sacral,
1 coccygeal.
Peripheral
Nervous System
Now that we’ve looked at
spinal and cranial nerves,
we can examine the
divisions of the PNS.
The PNS is broken down
into a sensory and a motor
division.
We’ll concentrate on the
motor division which
contains the somatic
nervous system and the
autonomic nervous
system.
Somatic vs. Autonomic
Voluntary Involuntary
Skeletal muscle Smooth, cardiac muscle;
glands
Single efferent neuron
Multiple efferent neurons
Axon terminals release Axon terminals release
acetylcholine acetylcholine or
Always excitatory norepinephrine
Controlled by the Can be excitatory or
cerebrum inhibitory
Controlled by the
homeostatic centers in the
brain – pons,
hypothalamus, medulla
oblongata
Autonomic Nervous System
2 divisions:
– Sympathetic
“Fight or flight”
“E” division
– Exercise, excitement,
emergency, and
embarrassment
– Parasympathetic
“Rest and digest”
“D” division
– Digestion, defecation,
and diuresis
Antagonistic
Control
Most internal organs are
innervated by both branches of
the ANS which exhibit
antagonistic control
…synapse with a
ganglionic neuron w/i …ascend or
the same chain ganglion. descend in the trunk
to synapse within
another chain
ganglion.