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- Gastric plexuses - Wikipedia
The superior gastric plexus (gastric or coronary plexus) accompanies the left gastric artery along the lesser curvature of the stomach, and joins with branches from the left vagus nerve The term "inferior gastric plexus" is sometimes used to describe a continuation of the hepatic plexus
- Gastric Plexus | Complete Anatomy - Elsevier
The gastric plexuses are mixed plexuses conveying both sympathetic and parasympathetic nerves to the stomach It also conveys visceral sensory nerves back to the CNS
- Stomach Nerves – Vagus Nerve, Celiac and Enteric Plexus
The sympathetic supply to the stomach is from celiac plexus which receives fibers from T6 to T9 via the greater splanchnic nerve The fibers of the celiac plexus follows the course of the gastric and gastroomental arteries to reach the stomach
- Physiology, Gastrointestinal Nervous Control - StatPearls - NCBI Bookshelf
Submucosal ganglia and connecting fiber bundles form plexuses in the small and large intestines but not the stomach and esophagus This arrangement of nerves receives data from mechanoreceptors and chemoreceptors and manipulates secretion and blood flow [3]
- Gastric plexuses - e-Anatomy - IMAIOS
Gastric plexuses refer to a meshwork of autonomic neurons and ganglia situated around the gastric arteries They are considered to be periarterial extensions of the celiac plexus, which spread along the branches of celiac trunk to innervate various parts of the stomach
- Gastrointestinal motility disorders in neurologic disease - PMC
The ENS is an integrative system of ganglionated nerve plexuses, including the myenteric (Auerbach’s) plexus located between the two muscular layers of the muscularis externa, and the submucosal (Meissner’s) plexus (Figure 1)
- Autonomic Nerves of the Abdomen Anatomy - pediagenosis
The autonomic innervation to the abdominal viscera is provided by perivascular plexuses of nerves accompanying the arterial supply to each organ The plexuses comprise sympathetic and parasympathetic fibres of both motor and sensory type
- Nerves of the Abdomen | UAMS Department of Neuroscience
branches of the lumbosacral plexus: iliohypogastric n , ilioinguinal n , genitofemoral n , lateral femoral cutaneous n , femoral n , obturator n , lumbosacral trunk (considered to be part of sacral plexus), brs to the psoas major and minor mm , branches to the quadratus lumborum m , superior inferior gluteal nn , n to the obturator internus
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