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Peripheral Nervous System
What Is the Peripheral Nervous System?
The peripheral nervous system is a network of nerves that runs throughout the head, neck, and body. It carries messages to and from the central nervous system (the brain and spinal cord). Together, the peripheral nervous system and the central nervous system form the nervous system.
What Does the Peripheral Nervous System Do?
The brain and body send information back and forth all the time. The peripheral (per-IF-er-ul) nervous system is in charge of delivering these messages. Some kinds of messages begin in the eyes, ears, nose, tongue, and skin and move to the brain. Other kinds of messages begin in the brain and then move to other parts of the body. For example, if you smell smoke, the message goes from your nose to your brain. Then your brain allows you to think about what is happening and sends messages to your muscles to move to get you out of danger.
The peripheral nervous system is at work all the time, even when we sleep. It sends messages to the heart to keep it beating, to the muscles that we use for breathing, and to the digestive system to keep food moving along.
What Are the Parts of the Peripheral Nervous System?
The peripheral nervous system has two parts:
- The somatic (so-MA-tik) nervous system controls actions that we do by choice (voluntarily), like walking, eating, or playing an instrument.
- The autonomic (ah-tuh-NOM-ik) nervous system controls processes that happen automatically (involuntarily), like breathing, digestion, sweating, and shivering. The autonomic nervous system has two parts: the sympathetic nervous system and the parasympathetic nervous system. The sympathetic nervous system gets the body ready to react quickly to stressful or scary events. The parasympathetic nervous system controls body functions when we're calm and resting.
Note: All information is for educational purposes only. For specific medical advice,
diagnoses, and treatment, consult your doctor.
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