A.2 - The Facial nerve Flashcards
what is the facial nerve?
- The facial nerve = CN 7
- contains:
1. mainly motor fibers supplying the muscles of facial expressio
2. visceral efferent parasympathetic
3. visceral afferent (taste) fibers.
where does the facial nerve exists?
Both nerves leave the brainstem adjacent to the vestibular nerve, between the inferior cerebellar peduncle and the olive
waht are the facial nerve fibers?
Sensory
gustatory sensation
Autonomic
motor
the motor nucleus of the facial nerve?
lies in the lower pons, medial to the descending nucleus and tract of the Vth cranial nerve.
where does the facial nerve branch off?
The facial nerve gives off several branches before exiting from the skull through the stylomastoid
foramen.
what is nervus intermedius?
The facial nerve and its visceral root
route of nervous intermedius
exit from the lateral aspect of the
brainstem and cross the cerebellopontine angle immediately adjacent to the VIII cranial nerve →
internal auditory meatus → facial canal of the temporal bone (lie in close proximity to the inner ear and tympanic membrane)
route of Visceral efferent and visceral afferent fibres
They run together as the nervus intermedius and accompany the facial nerve to the internal auditory meatus.
arise and terminate in the superior salivary nucleus and solitary nucleus/tract respectively
route of facial nerve visceral efferent fibers
The parasympathetic fibres (visceral efferent) pass in the greater petrosal nerve → sphenopalatine ganglion → lacrimal gland (producing tears) + in the chorda tympani nerve → submandibular ganglion.
what does the chorda tympani nerve contain?
parasympathetic efferent and visceral afferent fibres.
what are chorda tympani parasympathetic fibers responsible for?
salivation.
what sensations Visceral afferent fibres of the chorda tympani convy?
taste from the anterior two-thirds of the tongue.
where are the cell bodies of the visceral afferent fibers of the chorda tympani?
geniculate ganglion contains the bipolar cell bodies
Supranuclear control of facial muscles
● Muscles of lower face:
contralateral hemisphere
● Upper face:
both hemispheres (bilateral representation)
● Lower motor neuron lesion → paralyses all facial muscles on that side
● Upper motor neuron (supranuclear) lesion → paralyses the muscles in the lower half of the face
on the opposite side.
Clinical examination of the facial nerve?
facial weakness
taste impairment
reduced lacrimation on one side
reduced salivation on one side
hyperacusis (exaggeration of sounds -loss of the stapedius reflex-).
Facial weakness is due to?
VI nerve palsy
V, VIII, (IX, X, XI) nerve palsies:
Loss of taste and salivation
hyperacusis
diabetes
infectious mononucleosis