Book ReviewThe Mechanisms of Disease: A study of the autonomic nervous system, the endocrine system and the electrolytes in their relationship to clinical medicine.

1953 ◽  
Vol 249 (21) ◽  
pp. 868-868
Author(s):  
Franz J. Incelfinger
1939 ◽  
Vol 85 (358) ◽  
pp. 1036-1042
Author(s):  
Duncan Macmillan ◽  
H. Fischgold

Though detailed knowledge of the autonomic nervous system is comparatively recent, the initial conceptions of its nature have undergone very important modifications during the time it has been known. This is mainly due to the fact that originally the anatomical discovery was taken up by investigators in various branches of clinical medicine, physiology and pharmacology, and made a special subject for detailed research. Especially did the dualism which is so remarkable a feature of the autonomic nervous system give rise to a number of theories about the relationship of the two components.


Health ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (09) ◽  
pp. 1159-1170 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kaho Akimoto ◽  
Ailing Hu ◽  
Takuji Yamaguchi ◽  
Hiroyuki Kobayashi

2018 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
pp. 61-65
Author(s):  
Ronald P Rubin

This article encapsulates the career of Joshua Burn, whose work encouraged new lines of experimentation and paved the way for fundamental advances in our knowledge of the autonomic nervous system. His legacy also endures in his efforts as Department Chairman to oversee a very supportive environment which led to the development of many successful scientists. By producing a body of work that enabled the discipline of pharmacology to contribute in a major way to the advancement of clinical medicine, Joshua Burn stands out as a unique figure in the annals of true scientific pioneers.


Complex animals have evolved two separate systems for the control of body tissues. One is the nervous system, which makes direct connections with specific muscles and glands and regulates their activity by the focal release of neurotransmitters. The other system is the endocrine system, where hormones, secreted into the circulation, can exert effects on remote tissues in many different locations simultaneously. The classical distinction between the two systems is, however, blurred. Some hormones, such as antidiuretic hormone and oxytocin, are released into the bloodstream by neurones, rather than by typical endocrine cells. In other situations, hormones are released only to act locally, not all over the body, as with paracrine cells. Occasionally, the hormone feeds back on to the cell that secreted it, as in autocrine regulation. The interface between neural and endocrine control lies in the hypothalamus and related areas of the brain. This region also helps integrate the output of the autonomic nervous system, which controls visceral function. Hypothalamic areas also regulate appetite behaviours for food, water, sex, etc. Autonomic nervous system, appetites, and hormones all contribute to homeostasis — the regulation of the internal environment of the body. The hypothalamus and the pituitary gland form the ‘hypothalamic–pituitary endocrine axis’. This axis regulates much of the body’s endocrine activity through a system of hypothalamic factors. These factors, which are hormones in their own right, regulate the release of individual pituitary hormones. Each pituitary ‘trophic’ hormone then controls a part of the overall endocrine system. Thus, pituitary hormones control hormone production by thyroid, adrenal cortex, liver, and gonads. This complex cascade of hormonal control is regulated by various types of negative feedback based on plasma hormone concentrations. The hypothalamus and pituitary are also controlled by higher centres in the brain. Other endocrine tissues also use negative feedback control, but rather than the level of the hormone itself, it is the level of stimulus that regulates hormone secretion. Thus, rising plasma osmolarity (or decreasing blood volume) stimulates antidiuretic hormone secretion, and rising plasma glucose stimulates insulin secretion. Combinations of hormones are sometimes used to regulate an aspect of the internal environment. The control of plasma calcium by calcitonin, parathormone, and calcitriol (1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol), and of plasma glucose by insulin and glucagon, are examples.


2021 ◽  
pp. 127-132
Author(s):  
Elizabeth A. Coon ◽  
Eduardo E. Benarroch

The hypothalamus is the neural center of the endocrine system, the regulator of the autonomic nervous system, and the circadian and seasonal clock for behavioral and sleep-wake functions. The hypothalamus maintains homeostasis by integrating cortical, limbic, and spinal inputs and by affecting hormone release, temperature regulation, intake of food and water, sexual behavior and reproduction, emotional responses, and diurnal rhythms. As the link from the nervous system to the endocrine system, the hypothalamus synthesizes and secretes neurohormones that stimulate or inhibit the secretion of pituitary hormones.


1927 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 256-256
Author(s):  
A. Favorsky

The author's work, which came out from the laboratory of a major researcher in the field of autonomic-endocrine system, Prof. A. A. Bogomolets, is of undoubted interest also for the clinician. The author concludes that "the ways of occurrence and course of the fibers of the v. n. c. pathways are homogeneous in the anatomical sense", with which one cannot but agree. Further, it is also impossible not to agree that for a number of organs there is no antagonistic innervation in the true sense of the word, and that the sympathetic nerve plays the main role in the chemistry of secretory processes. The author considers vagotonia in its pure form as hyposympathicotomy.


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