Walsh & Hoyt: General Organization of the Autonomic Nervous System

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Identifier wh_ch14_p649
Title Walsh & Hoyt: General Organization of the Autonomic Nervous System
Creator Randy H. Kardon, MD, PhD
Affiliation Director of Neuro-Ophthalmology Services, Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, University of Iowa
Subject Autonomic Nervous System; Anatomy; Physiology; Autonomic Nervous System
Description Body functions that are regulated independently of voluntary activity using reflex mechanisms involving afferent nerve input, efferent nerve output, and central integrating nerve pathways are part of the autonomic nervous system. Although the activity of this system is essentially autonomous, at higher levels of the central nervous system (CNS) voluntary modulation is still possible. As early as 1875, Hughlings Jackson offered clinical, physiologic, and experimental evidence to show that the autonomic nervous system, like the somatic nervous system, is integrated at all levels of nervous activity and that autonomic and somatic activities are closely correlated. Segmental autonomic reflexes are coordinated in the spinal cord, but regulation of functions such as respiration, blood pressure, swallowing, and pupillary movement requires suprasegmental integration higher in the brain stem. The autonomic subsystems in the brain stem are, in turn, influenced by more complicated integrating systems in the hypothalamus. Finally, certain cortical areas, particularly the frontal cortex, govern many of the activities of the hypothalamus. Thus, coordination and integration of somatic and autonomic activities from the highest level of neurologic activity in cortex down to the spinal cord and peripheral nervous system (PNS) are used to attain fundamental adjustments of the organism to its environment.
Date 2005
Language eng
Format application/pdf
Type Text
Source Walsh and Hoyt's Clinical Neuro-Ophthalmology, 6th Edition
Relation is Part of Walsh and Hoyt's Clinical Neuro-Ophthalmology Walsh and Hoyt's Clinical Neuro-Ophthalmology
Collection Neuro-ophthalmology Virtual Education Library: NOVEL http://NOVEL.utah.edu
Publisher Wolters Kluwer Health, Philadelphia
Holding Institution Spencer S. Eccles Health Sciences Library, University of Utah, 10 N 1900 E SLC, UT 84112-5890
Rights Management Copyright 2005. For further information regarding the rights to this collection, please visit: https://NOVEL.utah.edu/about/copyright
ARK ark:/87278/s6tt80gj
Setname ehsl_novel_whts
ID 186132
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6tt80gj
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