Lecture 9 - Cranial Nerves Flashcards

1
Q

What is CN 1

A

Olfactory - S

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2
Q

What is CN 2

A

Optic - S

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3
Q

What is CN 3

A

Oculomotor - M

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4
Q

CN IV

A

Trochlear - M

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5
Q

CN V

A

Trigeminal - B

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6
Q

CN VI

A

Abducens - M

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7
Q

CN VII

A

Facial - B

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8
Q

CN VIII

A

Acoustic - S

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9
Q

CN IX

A

Glossopharyngeal - B

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10
Q

CN X

A

Vagus - B

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11
Q

CN XI

A

Accessory - M

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12
Q

CN XII

A

Hypoglossal - M

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13
Q

Where does the optic nerve go

A

retina –> optic chiasm –> joins to lateral geniculate nucleus of the thalamus –> forms optic radiation –> joins onto posterior internal capsule –> finishes at visual cortex of occipital lobe

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14
Q

How can an anterior lobectomy impact vision

A

can take out some of the meyer’s loop

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15
Q

How is the PMC organised?

A

retinotopically

the PMC is located on the banks of the calcarine fissure.

The superior (upper) parts of the visual field is represented on the lower bank of the calcarine fissure, and vice versa.

it is also organised contralaterally

the closer to the retina, the area is represented closer to the occipital pole, and a larger area is dedicated to it than regions in the periphery.

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16
Q

what is the difference between lesions of the meyers loop and optic radiation?

A

the Meyers loop/lower portion of optic radiation projects to the lower banks of the calcarine fissure –> cause loss of upper field of vision

The optic radiation/upper portion of optic radiation projects to the upper banks of calcarine fissure –> causes loss of lower field of vision;

both will be losses of contralateral fields of vision, and only one quadrant (upper or lower)

you can lesion the ENTIRE optic radiation (includes both upper and lower) to create contralateral homonymous hemianopia

17
Q

What are the two pathways for visual processing

A

WHERE? pathway - dorsal pathway (goes up) analyses motion and spatial infor

WHAT? pathway - ventral pathway (goes down) - analyses form, etc.

18
Q

pathological features that can occur for CN III?

A
Ptosis caused by loss of levator palpebrae function
 Eye deviated laterally and down
 Diplopia
 Dilated non reactive
pupil
 Loss of accommodation
19
Q

pathological features that can occur for CN IV?

A

 Inability to move eye downward
and laterally
 Diplopia
 Patients tilt head toward unaffected eye to overcome inward rotation of affected eye

20
Q

Which nerves control eye movement?

A

CN III, CN IV, and CN VI

OCULOMOTOR, TROCHLEAR AND ABDUCENS

they move the extraocular muscles

21
Q

What does CN V do?

A

trigeminal nerve

face, mouth and meningial sensation

motor innervation for mastication muscles!!

meninges - v1 - opthalmic
mouth - v2 - maxillary
face - v3 - mandibular.

22
Q

What does the aducens nerve do

A

CN VI

abducts the eye
motor

23
Q

What does the facial nerve do

A

it is both sensory and motor

sensory - taste for anterior 2/3 of tongue

motor - movement of facial expressions for the face

unilateral lesions will not paralyse above eyes because it is bilaterally innervated

24
Q

What is the difference between UMN and LMN damage causing hemifacial paralysis?

A

UMN - preserves forehead movement - damage is above the pons

LMN - whole side of face is paralysed

25
Q

What is bell’s palsy

A

unilateral face paralysis, acute..

no known reason, possibly viral.

abrupt LMN paresis, from 1-7 days onset.

go on corticoseroids.

26
Q

What does the acoustic nerve do?

A

vestibular and hearing

  • crosses midline multiple times so unilateral lesion does not cause significant hearing loss

SENSORY ONLY

27
Q

What does the accessory nerve do?

A

CN XI

Motor

innervates the sternomastoid and trapezius muscles - MOVES HEAD AND NECK

lesions will cause weakness in head turning TO THE opposite opposite side of the lesion

28
Q

What is bulbar palsy

A

LMN lesion of CN IV, V, and VII.

pseudo bulbar palsy is an UMN lesion of CN IX, X, and XII.

29
Q

what does the glossopharyngeal nerve do

A

both sensory and motor

motor - innervates part of tongue and pharynx and salivary gland

sensory - taste and sensory impulses from tongue and pharynx

30
Q

What does the vagus nerve do?

A

both sensory and motor

  • parasympathetic innervation!!!!! - goes to heart, lungs and vesceral organs

motor - pharynx (swallowing) and larynx (voice)

sensory - travel from aortic arch to innervate the pharynx, larynx, outer ear and meninges of the posterior fossa to the trigeminal nuclei

this is the only CN that extend BEYOND HEAD AND NECK

emerges from MEDULLA via jugular foramen