Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The vagus nerve (/ ˈ v eɪ. ɡ ə s /), also known as the tenth cranial nerve, cranial nerve X, or simply CN X, is a cranial nerve that carries sensory and motor fibers. It creates a pathway that interfaces with the parasympathetic control of the heart, lungs, and digestive tract.
Baseline vagal tone can be used either as a potential predictor of behavior or as a signal of mental health (particularly emotion regulation, anxiety, and internalizing and externalizing disorders). [28] [29] The polyvagal theory by Porges is an influential model of how the vagal pathways respond to novelty and to stressful external stimuli.
Cranial nerves; CN 0 – Terminal; CN I – Olfactory; CN II – Optic; CN III – Oculomotor; CN IV – Trochlear; CN V – Trigeminal; CN VI – Abducens; CN VII – Facial; CN VIII – Vestibulocochlear; CN IX – Glossopharyngeal; CN X – Vagus; CN XI – Accessory; CN XII – Hypoglossal
The theory has been widely adopted in trauma therapy, where practitioners use its concepts to help patients understand their physiological responses to stress and trauma. Therapists such as Bessel van der Kolk , Peter A. Levine , and others have incorporated elements of PVT into practices like somatic experiencing and trauma-informed care.
These pathways converge in the lateral amygdala. Long-term potentiation (LTP) and synaptic plasticity that enhances the response of lateral amygdala neurons to the conditioned stimulus occurs in the lateral amygdala. As a result, the conditioned stimulus is then able to flow from the lateral amygdala to the central nucleus of the amygdala.
Thus, the prefrontal input to the ANS modulate the inflammatory response to psychological stress in part via the cholinergic anti-inflammatory pathway. [14] In recent years, this PFC-Vagus Nerve-Spleen axis has been linked to cellular senescence [15] [16] and various pathologies such as neurodegenerative diseases and cancer. [17] [18]
Cochlear nerve (part of cranial nerve 8) – the main hearing-related cranial nerve; Smell. Olfactory nerve (cranial nerve 1) – the main smell-related cranial nerve; Taste. Taste-related cranial nerves: Facial nerve (cranial nerve 7) Glossopharyngeal nerve (cranial nerve 9) Vagus nerve (cranial nerve 10) Somatosensory system. Haptic perception
Major dopaminergic pathways from dopaminergic cell groups. Mesocortical pathway; Mesolimbic pathway; Nigrostriatal pathway; Tuberoinfundibular pathway; Serotonergic pathways. Raphe Nuclei; Norepinephrine Pathways Locus coeruleus and other noradrenergic cell groups; Epinephrine pathways from adrenergic cell groups