File:Kirkes' handbook of physiology (1907) (14583319948).jpg

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Identifier: kirkeshandbookof00kirk (find matches)
Title: Kirkes' handbook of physiology
Year: 1907 (1900s)
Authors: Kirkes, William Senhouse, 1823-1864 Greene, Charles Wilson, 1866-1947
Subjects: Physiology
Publisher: New York, W. Wood and company
Contributing Library: Columbia University Libraries
Digitizing Sponsor: Open Knowledge Commons

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of and in front of the vertebral column,and from which branches are distributed both to the cerebro-spinal systemand to other parts of the sympathetic system. With these may be included thesmall ganglia in connection with those branches of the fifth cerebral nervewhich are distributed in the neighborhood of the organs of special sense,namely, the ophthalmic, otic, sphenopalatine, and submaxillary ganglia.2, Various ganglia and plexuses of nerve fibers which give off branches to thethoracic and abdominal viscera, the chief of such plexuses being the cardiac, 592 THE NERVOUS SYSTEM solar, and hypogastric; but in intimate connection with these are manysecondary plexuses, as the aortic, spermatic, and renal. Fibers pass fromthe prevertebral chain of ganglia and from the cerebro-spinal nerves to theseplexuses. 3, Various ganglia and plexuses in the substance of many of theviscera, as in the stomach, intestines, and urinary bladder. These, which Gray RamusWhite Ramus Sympathetic Gang 11 on.
Text Appearing After Image:
Recurrent Branc of Meninges Sympathetic Ganglion. Fig. 418.—Schematic Representation of the Relation of the Constituents of the SympatheticChain and the Spinal Nerve. (Modified from Hardesty, in Morris Anatomy.) are for the most part microscopic, also freely communicate with other partsof the system, as well as with the cerebro-spinal axis. The connections between these parts are as follows: 1, The visceralbranch or white ramus, of certain spinal nerves, which passes into the lateralchain. 2, The gray rami consist of bundles of fibers, usually non-medullated,which pass from the chain ganglia back into the spinal or cranial nerves, the ORGANIZATION AM) DISTRIBUTION m fibers of which they accompany to the periphery. 3, From this chain therami efferentes pass into the collateral ganglia, and from these again otherbranches pass off into the organs, to end in the terminal ganglia. The white rami are absent in all the spinal nerves in the regions abovethe second (occasionally the first) t

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  • bookid:kirkeshandbookof00kirk
  • bookyear:1907
  • bookdecade:1900
  • bookcentury:1900
  • bookauthor:Kirkes__William_Senhouse__1823_1864
  • bookauthor:Greene__Charles_Wilson__1866_1947
  • booksubject:Physiology
  • bookpublisher:New_York__W__Wood_and_company
  • bookcontributor:Columbia_University_Libraries
  • booksponsor:Open_Knowledge_Commons
  • bookleafnumber:611
  • bookcollection:medicalheritagelibrary
  • bookcollection:ColumbiaUniversityLibraries
  • bookcollection:americana
  • BHL Collection
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28 July 2014

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