A
thorough discussion of how your body works best begins with an overview of your
nervous and endocrine systems, as these two organ systems act as co-directors
of all of the activities that occur in your body.
To
put it simply, your nervous and endocrine systems continuously monitor the well-being
of each of the billions of cells in your body, and they continuously take action
through messenger systems to keep all of your cells as healthy as possible.
A
Key Difference in How Your Nervous and Endocrine Systems Work
Though
your nervous and endocrine systems share the director's seat of your body, they
fulfill their roles in completely different ways.
Your
nervous system senses and controls every part of your body through its many nerves.
Sensory receptors located throughout your body constantly send information through
nerves to your brain; your brain digests this information; your brain then decides
on appropriate action, and executes the action by sending additional information
out to the target cells through other nerves.
For
example, if you accidentally touch a hot pan, sensory receptors register pain
almost instantaneously, this information travels through nerves to reach your
brain, your brain understands that your hand is in danger of being injured in
its current position, and your brain sends information down other nerves that
tells your muscles to jerk your hand away from the pan.
As
you almost certainly know from real life experience, transmission of information
throughout your nervous system can occur within milliseconds. But it can also
occur at a slower pace - good examples of slower and deliberate activity within
your nervous system are all of the activities that must take place within your
sensory receptors, nerves, brain, and muscles when you park your car in your driveway,
type an e-mail, wash vegetables, take a shower, or hit a tennis ball.
Your
endocrine system consists of a number of glands that produce and secrete hormones
that make their way into your bloodstream. Once in your bloodstream, your hormones
travel through your body and trigger specific actions whenever they encounter
cells that display compatible receptors.
Because
your endocrine system monitors and controls the well-being of your cells via your
circulatory system, it generally works at a slower pace than your nervous system,
sometimes taking hours to produce a desired effect as a hormone reaches its target
destination and carries out its job.
For
example, if your blood volume decreases for any reason (like dehydration), your
endocrine system will sense this and call your kidneys, liver, lungs, adrenal
glands, and blood vessels to action, with the end result being an increase in
blood volume.
So
your nervous system uses sensory receptors, nerves, and your brain to monitor
and control the well-being of all of your cells, while your endocrine system uses
your blood circulatory system to accomplish the same thing. Your nervous system
operates at lightning speed, while your endocrine system generally works more
slowly to create changes in your biochemistry.
Strands
of One Big Web
Your
nervous and endocrine systems are highly interdependent in behavior, much like
all the strands of a spider web are intimately connected in stability and behavior.
The
interdependent relationship between your nervous and endocrine systems begins
in a tiny area of tissue in your brain called your hypothalamus.
Your
hypothalamus is only about as large as a grape, and can be viewed as the micro-processing
chip that controls almost all of your body's external and internal activities.
Your hypothalamus receives information from all of the major areas of your brain,
your major organs, and your eyes, and it registers sensations like pain, temperature,
hunger, thirst, lust, stress, fear, and anger.
Once
your hypothalamus registers incoming information and decides what your body needs
to best survive and be healthy, it uses your autonomic nervous system to affect
the behavior of all of your major organs. Examples of such effects are increased
heart and lung rates, increased blood flow to your skeletal muscles or digestive
organs, changes in how much light enters your eyes and how well your eyes can
focus on distant objects, production of sweat or shivers, and arousal of sexual
organs.
Your
hypothalamus also produces a number of different hormones that directly impact
your pituitary gland, which is about the size of a green pea, and is located just
below your hypothalamus.
Amazingly,
your pea-size pituitary gland is the chief gland of your endocrine system; it
has two distinct portions that produce and secrete hormones that govern the activities
and well-being of all of your organ systems. Actually, because your hypothalamus
governs the activities of your pituitary gland, it may be more accurate to call
your hypothalamus the master gland of your endocrine system. But technically,
your hypothalamus is considered to be specialized neuroendocrine tissue
because of its unique ability to affect both your nervous and endocrine systems.
Ultimately,
what's important to know is this:
Together,
your hypothalamus and pituitary gland have significant, ongoing influence over
every other component of your endocrine system.
"Other
components" includes your thyroid gland, parathyroid glands, pineal gland, adrenal
glands, and all organs and tissues that secrete hormones - these organs and tissues
include your kidneys, liver, stomach, small intestine, pancreas, heart, skin,
thymus, and fat tissue. The ovaries, testes, and placenta also secrete hormones,
and are considered to be important components of the endocrine system.
The
Big Picture
In
order get a sense of how your nervous and endocrine systems work together to keep
you well, consider the example of hiking in a national park somewhere in Alaska
late at night and coming upon a hungry grizzly bear.
As
soon as your eyes detect the bear and your brain understands the bear's desire
to make you her next meal, your hypothalamus uses your autonomic nervous system
to immediately prepare your eyes to see better, your brain to think more quickly,
and your heart, lungs, and large skeletal muscles to allow you to run faster or
fight with more strength.
Interestingly,
your autonomic nervous system accomplishes some of the above by stimulating the
release of epinephrine and norepinephrine from the inner portion of your adrenal
glands - this is yet another way in which your nervous and endocrine systems are
intertwined in their roles as governors of all of your physiological activities.
Through
your endocrine system, your hypothalamus stimulates the release of glucocorticoids
(mainly cortisol) from the outer portion of your adrenal glands. Glucocorticoids
increase the production of glucose, which ensures adequate availability of fuel
to fight or run away from the bear.
Here
are the main points to take away from this article:
All
of your nervous and endocrine system's responses to physical danger also occur
when you experience any type of emotional stress - to a lesser degree than in
the example of encountering a grizzly, but ultimately, all of your cells are exposed
to the same stress-related neurotransmitters and hormones whenever you are feeling
emotionally stressed.
So
the result of ineffectively managing emotional stress over a long period of time
is premature aging and disease due to chronically being in fight-flight mode.
Also,
in most cases, it doesn't make any sense to try to address just one particular
problem within your nervous or endocrine systems with a specific remedy, like
medication or a nutritional supplement. For example, multiple sclerosis, Alzheimer's,
and Parkinson's disease are all systemic neurological challenges that are affected
by every food that you eat, every hour of fatigue that you experience, and every
emotion that courses through and touches every cell in your mind and body.
The
same goes for almost all endocrine-related health challenges. For example, it's
not possible to isolate the health status of your thyroid gland, to identify one,
two, or five factors that are contributing to thyroid dysfunction. Every
facet of your existence affects the health of your thyroid gland, and any diligent
and well-thought out attempt to address real thyroid dysfunction must bring into
consideration all main
causes of disease and dysfunction.
Put
another way, the health of every component of your nervous and endocrine systems
depend on your overall health status and how healthy all of your organ systems
are; the health of each of your body parts cannot be compartmentalized.
Of
course, there can be focal causes of specific conditions, like the case of poor
upper body posture creating shoulder impingement syndrome, or the case of an iodine
deficiency resulting in enlargement of your thyroid gland (called a goiter).
So
it does pay to have unusual symptoms of discomfort that you can't account for
evaluated by a physician. But regardless of whether one specific cause is identified
or not, you'll always stand a good chance of experiencing improvement by ensuring
that you are earning good overall health through healthy living.
Next
in this series on how your body works, we'll look at some concrete steps that
you can take to help support the health of your nervous and endocrine systems.
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