(Redirected from Gangliated trunks)
The 'sympathetic trunk' ('sympathetic chain', 'gangliated cord') is a bundle of nerve fibers that runs from the base of the
skull to the
coccyx. There are two sympathetic trunks in the body, a right one and a left one.
Structure
The sympathetic trunk travels inferiorly from the skull, just lateral to the vertebral bodies. It interacts with the
spinal nerves or their ventral root by way of
rami communicantes.
The superior end of it is continued upward through the
carotid canal into the skull, and forms a
plexus on the
internal carotid artery; the inferior part travels in front of the
coccyx, where it converges with the other trunk at a structure known as the
ganglion impar.
Along the length of the sympathetic trunk are
ganglia known as
paravertebral ganglia.
Function
The sympathetic trunk is a fundamental part of the sympathetic division of the
autonomic nervous system. It allows nerve fibers to travel to spinal nerves that are superior and inferior to the one in which it originated. Also, a number of nerves, such as most of the
splanchnic nerves, arise directly from the trunks.
Additional images
See also
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Splanchnic nerves
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Spinal nerves
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Autonomic nervous system
External links
★ - "The position of the right and left vagus nerves, and sympathetic trunks in the mediastinum."
★ - "The Female Pelvis: The Posterolateral Pelvic Wall"
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★ - "Autonomic Connections of the Spinal Cord"
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Diagram at umm.edu