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The Peripheral Nervous System

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Title: The Peripheral Nervous System


1
The Peripheral Nervous System
2
Peripheral Nervous System
  • 31 pairs of spinal nerves
  • 12 pairs of cranial nerves
  • All of the smaller nerves that branch from larger
    nerves

3
Afferent and Efferent Pathways
Afferent Pathways
Efferent Pathways
4
Spinal Nerves
  • 31 Pairs
  • Numbered according to the level of the vertebral
    column at which they emerge from the spinal
    cavity
  • Lumbar, Sacral, and Coccygeal nerves descend from
    their point of origin at the lower end of the
    spinal cord
  • Lower end of the cord is called the cauda equina,
    which means horses tail in Latin

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Structure of Spinal Nerves
  • Mixed Nerves (contain motor and sensory fibers)
  • Attach by means of two short roots
  • Dorsal root
  • Has ganglion (cell bodies)
  • Carries sensory neruons
  • Ventral root
  • Carries motor neurons

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Dorsal and Ventral Rami
  • Soon after each spinal nerve emerges from the
    spinal cavity, it forms several large branches,
    each of which is called a ramus.
  • Dorsal Ramus
  • Supplies somatic motor and sensory fibers to
    serveral smaller nerves
  • Ventral Ramus
  • More complex

9
Rami of Spinal Nerves
10
Nerve Plexuses
  • Ventral rami of most spinal nerves subdivide to
    form complex networks called plexuses.
  • Cervical plexus
  • Brachial plexus
  • Lumbar plexus
  • Sacral plexus

11
  • Damage to one spinal nerve does not mean
    complete loss of function in any one region.

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Dermatomes and Myotomes
  • Each skin surface area supplied by sensory fibers
    of a given spinal nerve is called a dermatome.
  • A myotome is skeletal muscle or group of muscles
    that receives motor axons from a given spinal
    nerve.

14
Dermatome Distribution of Spinal Nerves
15
Myotomes and Body Movement
16
Cranial Nerves
  • 12 pairs
  • Connect to the undersurface of the brain
  • Pass through small foramina (holes) in the
    cranial cavity and skull
  • Identified by names and numbers
  • 3 Types
  • Mixed
  • Sensory
  • Motor

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Divisions of the Peripheral Nervous System
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Somatic Motor Nervous System
  • All the voluntary motor pathways outside the CNS
    (pathways to skeletal muscles)
  • Single motor neuron whose axon stretches from the
    cell body in the CNS all the way to the effector
  • Stimulates effectors by means of the
    neurotransmitter acetylcholine

20
Somatic Reflexes
  • The action that results from a nerve impulse
    passing over a reflex arc is called a reflex.
  • Predictable response to a stimulus
  • May or may not be conscious
  • Somatic reflexes are contraction of skeletal
    muscle
  • Autonomic reflexes consist of contractions of
    smooth or cardiac muscle, or secretion by glands
  • Used in the diagnosis of disease

21
Knee Jerk Reflex
22
Autonomic Nervous System
  • Regulates involuntary effectors
  • Major function of the ANS is to regulate
    heartbeat, smooth muscle contraction, and
    glandular secretion in ways to maintain
    homeostasis.

23
Sympathetic and Parasympathetic Divisions
  • Sympathetic and Parasympathetic have separate
    pathways
  • Effectors may have dual innervation, that is they
    have input from both types of pathways
  • Parasympathetic rest-and-repair
  • Sympathetic fight-or-flight

24
Autonomic Conduction Paths
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