s in middle, and the vagus nerve as "X" in blue. The heart and organs below in list to right are regarded as viscera. The autonomic nervous system has been classically divided into the
sympathetic,
parasympathetic and
enteric nervous systems. More modern classifications recognize other networks that integral to different organs, such as the
intrinsic cardiac nervous system. The sympathetic division emerges from the
spinal cord in the
thoracic and
lumbar areas, terminating around L2-3. The parasympathetic division has craniosacral "outflow", meaning that the
neurons begin at the
cranial nerves (specifically the
oculomotor nerve,
facial nerve,
glossopharyngeal nerve and
vagus nerve) and
sacral (S2-S4) spinal cord. These divisions are distinctive because they require a sequential two-neuron efferent pathway; the
preganglionic neuron must
first synapse onto a
postganglionic neuron before
innervating the target organ. The preganglionic, or first, neuron will have its nerve cell body in the
central nervous system and will synapse at the postganglionic, or second, neuron's cell body. The postganglionic neuron will then form junctions within the target organ.
Sympathetic division The sympathetic nervous system consists of cells with bodies in the
lateral grey column from T1 to L2/3. These cell bodies are
"GVE" (general visceral efferent) neurons and are the preganglionic neurons. There are several locations upon which
preganglionic neurons can synapse for their
postganglionic neurons: •
paravertebral ganglia (3) of the sympathetic chain (these run on either side of the vertebral bodies) •
cervical ganglia (3) •
thoracic ganglia (12) and rostral
lumbar ganglia (2 or 3) • caudal lumbar ganglia and
sacral ganglia •
prevertebral ganglia (celiac ganglion, aorticorenal ganglion, superior mesenteric ganglion, inferior mesenteric ganglion) •
chromaffin cells of the
adrenal medulla (this is the one exception to the two-neuron pathway rule: the synapse is directly efferent onto the target cell bodies) These ganglia provide the postganglionic neurons from which innervation of target organs follows. Examples of
splanchnic (visceral) nerves are: • cervical cardiac nerves and thoracic visceral nerves, which synapse in the
sympathetic chain •
thoracic splanchnic nerves (greater, lesser, least), which synapse in the prevertebral ganglia •
lumbar splanchnic nerves, which synapse in the prevertebral ganglia •
sacral splanchnic nerves, which synapse in the inferior hypogastric plexus These all contain afferent (sensory) nerves as well, known as
GVA (general visceral afferent) neurons.
Parasympathetic division The parasympathetic nervous system consists of cells with bodies in one of two locations: the
brainstem (cranial nerves III, VII, IX, X) or the sacral spinal cord (S2, S3, S4). These are the preganglionic neurons, which synapse with postganglionic neurons in these locations: •
parasympathetic ganglia of the head: ciliary (
cranial nerve III), geniculate (cranial nerve VII), • pterygopalatine (
cranial nerve VII and IX), and submandibular (
cranial nerve VII and IX), • ottic in inner ear space (
cranial nerve IX) •
tympanic nerve of VII with C9, C10, C5 (cranial nerves
VII, XI, X, V) in promontory plexus in middle ear space •
trigeminal ganglion specially sensory (only mastication motor) is common with other ones • in or near the wall of an organ innervated by the vagus (
cranial nerve X) or
sacral nerves plexus (S2, S3, S4) These ganglia provide the postganglionic neurons from which innervations of target organs follows. Examples are: • the postganglionic parasympathetic splanchnic (visceral) nerves • the
vagus nerve, which passes through the
thorax and
abdominal regions innervating, among other organs, the heart, lungs, liver and stomach
Enteric nervous system Development of the enteric nervous system Development of the enteric nervous system involves migration of cells from the vagal section of the
neural crest, eventually populating the entire gastrointestinal tract. Having about 200 million neurons, the ENS communicates with the central nervous system while regulating gut function independently.
Motor neurons Motor neurons of the autonomic nervous system are found in "autonomic ganglia". Those of the parasympathetic branch are located close to the target organ whilst the ganglia of the sympathetic branch are located close to the spinal cord. The sympathetic ganglia here, are found in two chains: the pre-vertebral and pre-aortic chains. The activity of autonomic ganglionic neurons is modulated by "preganglionic neurons" located in the central nervous system. Preganglionic sympathetic neurons are located in the spinal cord, at the thorax and upper lumbar levels. Preganglionic parasympathetic neurons are found in the medulla oblongata where they form visceral motor nuclei; the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus nerve; the nucleus ambiguus, the
salivatory nuclei, and in the sacral region of the spinal cord. ==Function==