These are part of the Central Nervous System (CNS).
What is the brain and spinal cord?
This is what the sympathetic nervous system is referred as. (hint what the response is nick-named)
What is the "fight or flight" system?
This is what the parasympathetic nervous system is referred as (hint it is the nick-name for the response)
What is the "rest and digest" system?
This is the response when Beta1 receptors are inhibited.
What is slow the heart rate?
This is the nervous system that becomes dominate when a person experiences stress.
What is the sympathetic nervous system?
These are the parts of the Peripheral Nervous System (PNS).
What is all nervous tissue outside the CNS, including sensory and motor neurons?
These are the main receptor types in the sympathetic nervous system.
What are Alpha1, Alpha2, Beta1, Beta2, and Beta3?
This is the only receptor type that is ONLY in the parasympathetic nervous system.
What is the muscarinic receptor?
This is what happens in the stomach when the parasympathetic nervous system is dominate.
What is excrete more digestive enzymes?
This is the response of the bladder when the sympathetic nervous system is dominate.
What is the bladder muscles relax?
These are what the somatic nervous system controls.
What are skeletal muscles?
This is the receptor subclass that is in the heart.
What are the Beta1 receptors?
This is the receptor that is in BOTH the sympathetic and and parasympathetic nervous system.
This is what happens when Beta2 receptors are activated.
What is bronchodilation?
This is the neurotransmitter of the parasympathetic nervous system.
What is Acetylcholine (Ach)?
These are what the autonomic nervous system controls.
What is controls involuntary responses by influencing organs, glands, and smooth muscles?
This is the receptor subclass that is in the lungs?
What are the Beta2 receptors?
This is the other term used for the "parasympathetic" nervous system.
What is cholinergic?
This is what happens when the muscarinic receptors are inhibited.
What is the sympathetic nervous system becomes dominate?
This is the neurotransmitter that is used in the Beta receptors.
What is Norepinephrine (NE)?
These are the basic functions of the nervous system.
What are: Recognizing changes in the internal and external environment, Process those changes, and React to environmental changes by producing an action or response?
This is the receptor subclass that is in the vascular system.
What are Alpha1 receptors?
This occurs in the lungs when the parasympathetic nervous system is the dominate system?
What is bronchoconstriction?
This is what happens when the Alpha2 receptors are activated.
What is the sympathetic nervous system activity is DECREASED?
This is the other term used for the sympathetic nervous system.
What is adrenergic?