Cranial Nerves Flashcards

1
Q

Cranial vs. Spinal Nerves

A

Cranial nerves come from ventral side of brain/brainstem; only carry parasympathetic modality; get sympathetic modality from spinal nerves; part of CNS

Spinal nerves come out of spinal cord; carry parasympathetic and sympathethic modalities; part of PNS

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2
Q

Cranial Nerves that Carry Special Sensory Modalities

A
  1. Smell- CN I (Olfactory)
  2. Vision-CN II (Optic)
  3. Balance and Hearing; CN VIII-(Vestibulocochlear)
  4. Taste/Gustatory- Branches of CN VII( facial), CN IX (glossopharyngeal) and Cranial nerve X( vagus)
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3
Q

What are cranial nerves?

A

12 pairs of nerves
CN I and II come from forebrain

CN III-XII come from brainstem

Mostly innervate head and neck

Contain special sensory modalities ( smell, vision, gustatory,, and balance/hearing)

Have parasympathetic ( CN X) but not sympathetic innervation

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4
Q

CN I

A

Olfactory or Smell

Not a discrete nerve

olfaction receptors found in top of nasal cavity

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5
Q

CN II

A

Optic/Vision

Nerve close to pituitary gland

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6
Q

Optic Path

A
  1. Optic nerves ( L and R) come together at optic chiasm

2. After optic chiasm the optic nerves split and become the optic tract

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7
Q

How visual field organized_____

A
  1. lateral side of retina will see central vision and the medial part of retina will see the outer part of vision ( peripheral vision)
  2. the medial retina crosses over to opposite side ( contralateral) of brain through the optic chiasm
  3. the lateral retina doesn’t crossover at optic chiasm; it stays to the same side after passing optic chiasm ( ipsilateral)
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8
Q

Hemianopsia

A

Temporal/peripheral vision lost with optic chiasm lesions

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9
Q

CN III, CN IV, and CN VI

A

Nerves involved in eye movement
has PNS, SNS, somatic motor, and visceral motor innervation

CN III-Oculomotor

CN IV-Trochlear

CN VI-Abducens

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10
Q

CN V

A

Trigeminal

major sensoroy nerve of face and motor innervation to some skeletal muscles

Divided in 3 branches: V1 ( ophthalmic), V2 ( maxillary) and V3 ( mandibular)

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11
Q

CN VII

A

Facial

motor innervation to facial expression muscles and most glands, taste from front of tongue

Complex Intracranial and extracranial path

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12
Q

Facial Weakness Test

A

A clinicial test that can differ b/w PNS or CNS damage

PNS-total facial droop of one side of face ( bell’s palsy)

CNS- both side of forehead region only is functional and rest of affected side of face had droop

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13
Q

CN VIII

A

Vestibulocochlear

Carries two special sensory modalities:

  1. Vestibular
  2. Cochlear
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14
Q

CN IX

A

Glossopharygneal

Has general sensory, visceral sensory, special sensory, and motor modalities related to tongue and other structures in mouth

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15
Q

CN X

A

Vagus

Has general sensory, visceral sensory, PNS, and somatic motor modalities

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16
Q

CN XI

A

Spinal accessory

Not really a CN, travels with CN X

17
Q

CN XII

A

Hypogloassal

Somatic motor innervation of intrinsic and extrinsic tongue muscles

18
Q

Parasympathetic Ganglia

A

Ganglia=contains cell body of peripheral nerves and is meeting place of two nerves

Involves a pre-ganglionic nerve ( long) and a post-ganglion nerve ( short)

19
Q

How to Assess function of CNs in Clinical Exam

A

Simple Clinical Test that is used to measure CNs dys/function:

CN 1 Smell mint
CN 2 Look straight ahead=can you see
CN 3, 4,6= head immobile but eyes move , tracing H; parasymapthetics for 3,shine light
CN 5 touch=temporal, cheek, and jaw ( three branches)
CN 7=make expressions
CN 8=can you hear; balance test
CN 9=stick something in back of thoart ( can be uncomfortable
CN 10=no autonomic, swalling, speaking
CN 11=raise shoulder, head side to side
CN 12=stick out tongue (