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THE MERCK MANUAL MEDICAL LIBRARY: The Merck Manual of Medical Information--Home Edition
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Nerves
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Nerves

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The peripheral nervous system consists of more than 100 billion nerve cells that run throughout the body like strings, making connections with the brain, other parts of the body, and often with each other. Peripheral nerves consist of bundles of nerve fibers. These fibers are wrapped with many layers of tissue composed of a fatty substance called myelin. These layers form the myelin sheath, which speeds the conduction of nerve impulses along the nerve fiber. Nerves conduct impulses at different speeds depending on their diameter and on the amount of myelin around them.

The peripheral nervous system has two parts: the somatic nervous system and the autonomic nervous system.

Somatic Nervous System: This system consists of nerves that connect the brain and spinal cord with muscles controlled by conscious effort (voluntary or skeletal muscles) and with sensory receptors in the skin. (Sensory receptors are specialized endings of nerve fibers that detect information in and around the body.)

Autonomic Nervous System: This system connects the brain stem and spinal cord with internal organs and regulates internal body processes that require no conscious effort (see Autonomic Nervous System Disorders). Examples are the rate of heart contractions, blood pressure, the rate of breathing, the amount of stomach acid secreted, and the speed at which food passes through the digestive tract. The autonomic nervous system has two divisions:

  • Sympathetic division: Its main function is to prepare the body for stressful or emergency situations—for fight or flight.
  • Parasympathetic division: Its main function is to prepare the body for ordinary situations.

These divisions work together, usually with one activating and the other inhibiting the actions of internal organs. For example, the sympathetic division increases pulse, blood pressure, and breathing rates, and the parasympathetic system decreases each of them.

Typical Structure of a Nerve Cell

Typical Structure of a Nerve Cell

A nerve cell (neuron) consists of a large cell body and nerve fibers—one elongated extension (axon) for sending impulses and usually many branches (dendrites) for receiving impulses. Each large axon is surrounded by oligodendrocytes in the brain and spinal cord and by Schwann cells in the peripheral nervous system. The membranes of these cells consist of a fat (lipoprotein) called myelin. The membranes are wrapped tightly around the axon, forming a multilayered sheath. This myelin sheath resembles insulation, such as that around an electrical wire. Nerve impulses travel much faster in nerves with a myelin sheath than in those without one. If the myelin sheath of a nerve is damaged, nerve transmission slows or stops.

Cranial and Spinal Nerves: Nerves that connect the brain with the eyes, ears, nose, and throat and with various parts of the head, neck, and trunk are called cranial nerves. There are 12 pairs of them (see Cranial Nerve Disorders: Introduction). Nerves that connect the spinal cord with other parts of the body are called spinal nerves. The brain communicates with most of the body through the spinal nerves. There are 31 pairs of them, located at intervals along the length of the spinal cord (see Spinal Cord Disorders: Introduction). Several cranial nerves and most spinal nerves are involved in both the somatic and autonomic parts of the peripheral nervous system.

Spinal nerves emerge from the spinal cord through spaces between the vertebrae. Each nerve emerges as two short branches (called spinal nerve roots): one at the front of the spinal cord and one at the back.

  • Motor (anterior) nerve root: The motor root emerges from the front of the spinal cord. Motor nerve fibers carry commands from the brain and spinal cord to other parts of the body, particularly to skeletal muscles.
  • Sensory (posterior) nerve root: The sensory root enters the back of the spinal cord. Sensory nerve fibers carry sensory information (about body position, light, touch, temperature, and pain) to the brain from other parts of the body. The sensory nerve fibers from a specific sensory nerve root carry information from a specific area of the body, called a dermatome (see Spinal Cord Disorders: DermatomesFigures).

After leaving the spinal cord, the corresponding motor and sensory nerve roots join to form a single spinal nerve. Some of the spinal nerves form networks of interwoven nerves, called nerve plexuses. In a plexus, nerve fibers from different spinal nerves are sorted and recombined so that all fibers going to or coming from one area of a specific body part are put together into one nerve (see Peripheral Nerve Disorders:Plexus DisordersFigures). There are two major nerve plexuses: the brachial plexus, which sorts and recombines nerve fibers traveling to the arms and hands, and the lumbosacral plexus, which sorts and recombines nerve fibers going to the legs and feet.

Last full review/revision November 2007 by Steven A. Goldman, MD, PhD

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