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Sympathetic Nervous System

Sympathetic Nervous System

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Sympathetic nervous system
Summary..
Overview
  • The sympathetic nervous system brings is active in states of action; it produces the so-called fight or flight response.
  • It originates in the spinal cord from the intermediolateral cell column from T1 to L2.
  • It relays in paravertebral and prevertebral ganglia.
  • It innervates:
    • Endocrine and exocrine glands.
    • Nonglandular body organs.
    • Blood vessels and skin.
the origins of the sympathetic nervous system
  • The intermediolateral cell column lies from T1 to L2, which houses the origins of the sympathetic nervous system.
  • The paravertebral chain (aka sympathetic chain) as a series of beads on a string.
Paravertebral Chain
24 Ganglia
  • On average, it comprises 24 total ganglia:
    • 3 cervical
    • 10 thoracic
    • 3 – 5 lumbar
    • 3 – 5 sacral
    • And the ganglion impar (which is the most caudal paravertebral ganglion); it neighbors the coccyx.
Cervical & Upper Thoracic Ganglia
  • Superior cervical ganglion
  • Middle cervical ganglion
  • Inferior cervical ganglion
  • First thoracic ganglion.
  • Stellate ganglion refers to the combined inferior cervical and first thoracic ganglia.
Prevertebral Ganglia
They overlie the descending aorta from superior to inferior as the:
  • Celiac
  • Aorticorenal
  • Superior mesenteric
  • Inferior mesenteric
Clinical Correlation - Paraganglioma
Sympatheitc Innervation
Now, we're ready to walk through the sympathetic innervation of the body.
  • Demarcate the ciliospinal center of Budge at C8 – T2.
  • Show that it innervates the Head and Neck.
  • Divide the intermediolateral cell column into:
    • T1 to T5, which produce cardiopulmonary splanchnic nerves that innervate the thorax. These nerves originate from the paravertebral chain, which we'll illustrate in part 2 of the tutorial.
    • T5 to L2, which produce abdominopelvic splanchnic nerves that innervate the abdomen and pelvis. These nerves bypass the paravertebral ganglia; they synapse in prevertebral ganglia (which we'll illustrate in part 2 of the tutorial).
  • The ciliospinal center of Budge is innervated via the posterolateral hypothalamospinal tract. It innervates the superior cervical ganglion.
  • Postganglionic superior cervical ganglion fibers ascend the carotid artery to innervate the head and neck.
Horner's Syndrome
Postganglionic Fiber Projections
Thoracic projections
  • Upper and lower postganglionic fibers project to the thorax.
We specifically show the:
  • Lower respiratory tract:
    • Trachea
    • Lungs
  • Heart
Divergence and convergence
Divergence
  • To illustrate divergence, we draw a pair of preganglionic sympathetic fibers that originate from the same preganglionic neuron and synapse on separate postganglionic neurons.
Convergence
  • To illustrate convergence, we draw a pair of preganglionic sympathetic fibers that originate separately and synapse together on a single postganglionic neuron.
Prevertebral ganglia
Celiac ganglion
  • Preganglionic fibers pass the paravertebral chain and synapse on the celiac ganglion, which innervates the:
    • Upper 1/3 of the GI tract: the esophagus to the duodenum (the foregut derivatives).
    • Adominal organs, represented by the liver.
  • Preganglionic fiber synapse on the aorticorenal ganglion, which innervates the:
    • Kidneys
    • Adrenal glands (aka suprarenal glands).
  • Preganglionic fibers synapse on the superior mesenteric ganglion, which innervates the:
    • Middle 1/3 of the GI tract: the small intestine to the proximal 2/3 of the transverse colon (the midgut derivatives).
  • Preganglionic fiber synapse on the inferior mesenteric ganglion, which innervates the:
    • Lower 1/3 of the GI tract: distal 1/3 transverse colon to anal canal (the hindgut derivatives).
    • Lower urinary system – the bladder with lower portion of the ureters.
    • Reproductive organs (represented by the uterus and fallopian tubes).
  • Representative preganglionic sympathetic fiber bypass the paravertebral ganglia and synapse directly in the adrenal gland.
    • The adrenal gland releases epinephrine (predominantly).
The abdominopelvic splanchnic nerves
From superior to inferior:
  • The greater splanchnic nerve innervates the celiac ganglion.
  • The lesser splanchnic nerve innervates the aorticorenal ganglion.
  • The least splanchnic nerve innervates the superior mesenteric ganglion.
  • The lumbar splanchnic nerve innervates the inferior mesenteric ganglion.
sympathetic innervation of the limbs
  • One important clinical correlation is that the stellate ganglion innervates the upper extremity. Stellate sympathectomy is a treatment for upper extremity involvement in reflex sympathetic dystrophy (aka complex regional pain syndrome).