Cranial nerves 2 Flashcards

0
Q

Vestibular branch route

A

Semicircular canals, the saccule + utricle of inner ear -> vestibular ganglion -> vestibular nuclei in pons + medulla

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1
Q

CNVIII

A

Vestibulocochlear Nerve
sensory nerve
2 branches
Vestibular branch (carries impulses for equilibrium) and cochlear branch (Carries impulse for hearing)

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2
Q

Cochlear branch

A

Spiral organ (organ of corti) -> spiral ganglion -> auditory meatus -> medulla -> thalamus (medial genuculate nuclei, inferior colliculus midbrain) -> primary auditory area (41, 42)

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3
Q

Injury to vestibular branch

A

Vertigo - a subjective feeling that one’s own body or the environment is rotating
Ataxia - muscular incoordination
Nystagmus - involuntary rapid movement of the eyeball

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4
Q

Injury to cochlear branch

A

tinnitus - ringing in ears

Deafness

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5
Q

CN IX

A

Glossopharyngeal nerve

sensory, motor and autonomic

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6
Q

CN IX sensory

A
  1. Taste buds on posterior 1/3 of tongue
  2. Proprioceptors from some swallowing mm
  3. baroreceptors in carotid sinus that monitor BP
  4. Chemoreceptors
  5. External ear to convey touch, pain, heat and cold
    - > superior and inferior ganglia -> jugular foramen -> medulla
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7
Q

CN IX motor

A

nuclei in medulla ->jugular foramen -> stylopharyngeus mm

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8
Q

CN IX Autonomic

A

inferior salivary nucleus in medulla ->otic ganglion -> parotid gland (facial nerve goes through but Glossopharyngeal innervates it)

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9
Q

Injury to CN IX

A
Dysphagia -difficult to swallow
Aptyalia - no saliva 
Loss of sensation in throat
Ageusia - no taste
Glossopharyngeal neuralgia - posterior pharynx, tonsils, back of tongue, middle ear, can be triggered by chewing, swallowing, talking, sneezing, touching the tonsils an applicator
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10
Q

CN X

A

Vagus nerve
Autonomic
Motor and sensory

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11
Q

CN X sensory

A

Skin of external ear
a few taste buds in epiglottis and pharynx
proprioceptors in mm of neck and throat
baroreceptors and chemoreceptors
mainly from visceral sensory receptors in most organs of Thoracic and abdominal cavities that convey sensations (ie hunger, fullness, discomfort)
-> superior + inferior ganglia -> jugular foramen ->medulla

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12
Q

CNX motor

A

axons from medulla to jugular foremen -> pharynx, larynx, soft palate (swallowing, vocalization, coughing)

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13
Q

CNX autonomic

A

axons of autonomic motor neurons start in medulla and supply the lung, heart (cardiac), glands of the GI tract, smooth mm of respiratory passageways, esophagus, stomach, gallbladder, small intestine, most of large intestine

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14
Q

injury to CNX

A

vagal paralysis
dysphagia
tachycardia

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15
Q

CN XI

A

accessory nerve

motor nerve

16
Q

CNXI motor

A

motor axons from anterior grey horn of first 5 segments of c/spine (C1-C5) -> Ascend through foramen magnum -> exit through jugular foramen -> SCM + trapezium

17
Q

CN XI injury

A

Paralysis to SCM + Trapezius

18
Q

CNXII

A

Hypoglossal nerve (motor)

19
Q

CN XII motor

A

hypoglossal nucleus ->hypoglossal canal -> mm of tongue

20
Q

Injury to CN XII

A

difficulty chewing
dysarthria (slur speech)
dysphagia (swallow)
the tongue, when protruded, curls toward the affected side and that side atrophies

21
Q

Development of the nervous system

A
  • begins in the 3rd week of gestation
  • starts with a thickening of the ectoderm called the neural plate
  • neural plate folds inward + forms a longitudinal groove, called the neural groove
  • raised edges of neural plate are called neural folds
  • as the whole thing grows it forms a tube (neural tube)
22
Q

layers of walls of neural tube

A
  • outer/marginal layer cells = white matter of nervous system
  • middle/mantle layer cells = gray matter
  • inner/ependymal layer cells = lining of central canal (spinal cord) and ventricles of brain
23
Q

what is the mass of tissue between the neural tube and skin ectoderm?

A

Neural crest becomes posterior (dorsal) root ganglia of spinal nerves

  • spinal nerves
  • ganglia of cranial nerves
  • cranial nerves
  • ganglia of autonomic nervous system
  • adrenal medulla
  • meninges