Saturday, April 27, 2013

The Nerves-Histology of Nervous System

In the peripheral nervous system, the nerve fibers are grouped in bundles to form the nerves. Except for a few very thin nerves made up of unmyelinated fibers, nerves have a whitish, homogeneous, glistening appearance because of their myelin and collagen content.

Nerves have an external fibrous coat of dense connective tissue called epineurium, which also fills the space between the bundles of nerve fibers. Each bundle is surrounded by the perineurium, a sleeve formed by layers of flattened epitheliumlike cells. The cells of each layer of the perineurial sleeve are joined at their edges by tight junctions, an arrangement that makes the perineurium a barrier to the passage of most macromolecules and has the important function of protecting the nerve fibers from aggression. Within the perineurial sheath run the Schwann cell-sheathed axons and their enveloping connective tissue, the endoneurium. The endoneurium consists of a thin layer of reticular fibers, produced by Schwann cells.

The nerves establish communication between brain and spinal cord centers and the sense organs and effectors (muscles, glands, etc). They possess afferent and efferent fibers to and from the central nervous system. Afferent fibers carry the information obtained from the interior of the body and the environment to the central nervous system. Efferent fibers carry impulses from the central nervous system to the effector organs commanded by these centers. Nerves possessing only sensory fibers are called sensory nerves; those composed only of fibers carrying impulses to the effectors are called motor nerves. Most nerves have both sensory and motor fibers and are called mixed nerves; these nerves have both myelinated and unmyelinated axons .

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