Cranial Nerves Part 2 Flashcards
What are the locations of cranial nerves VII-XII?
See lecture notes
Where is the facial nerve (VII)?
- The facial nerve emerges from the pons, and passes through the internal acoustic meatus.
- The facial nerve runs through the petrous temporal bone and exits the skull via the stylomastoid foramen
Where does the facial nerve emerge from and run through?
- Facial nerve does not come out of internal acoustic meatus (this is your earhole)
- Actually does a right angle turn and travels inferiorly to emerge out of base of temporal bone
- The facial nerve emerges from the pons, and passes through the internal acoustic meatus.
- The facial nerve runs through the petrous temporal bone and exits the skull via the stylomastoid foramen
What are the branches and functions of the facial nerve?
- The facial nerve has many functions and a number of branches:
o Chordae tympani (parasympathetic and special sensory)
o Greater petrosal (parasympathetic)
o Motor root
Temporal
Zygomatic
Buccal
Marginal mandibular
Cervical - Greater petrosal nerve splits from the rest of the facial nerve within the temporal bone and runs superiorly to innervate the lacrimal gland (just lateral to eyelid/top left in picture) with parasympathetic fibres.
- Chordae tympani splits from the rest of the facial nerve within the temporal bone and runs into the infratemporal fossa to run towards the tongue and provide the anterior 2/3 with special sensory fibres. On its way it also provides the sublingual and submandibular glands with parasympathetic fibres
See notes for pictures
What are the branches of the motor portion of the facial nerve?
- The motor portion of the facial nerve runs out of the stylomastoid foramen and splits into 5 branches which collectively innervate the muscles of facial expression. o Temporal o Zygomatic o Buccal o Marginal mandibular o Cervical
What are the muscles of facial expression?
- Orbicular oris and buccinator muscles are not muscles of mastication but do help to keep food in the mood
- Orbicularis occuli muscle closes the eyes (with levator palpebrae superioris opens eye)
- Frontalis muscle raises the eyebrows – linked to occipitalis muscle at back of head via an aponeurosis of the scalp
What are the two types of facial nerve palsy?
- 2 causes:
o Bell’s Palsy (idiopathic/no known cause but fairly common and often resolves itself)
o Stroke - Major difference in how these pathologies present
- In Bell’s Palsy, lesion is in lower motor neuron to the facial nerve so causes total paralysis of facial muscles on affected side of face
- In strokes, lesion is in upper motor neuron to the facial nerve so lower motor neuron is still innervated and upper half of face retains movement (forehead sparing)
Where is the glossopharyngeal nerve (IX)
- The glossopharyngeal nerve emerges from the lateral surface of the medulla oblongata with the vagus nerve, they both exit the skull via the jugular foramen
- The glossopharyngeal nerve has general sensory and motor fibres as well as parasympathetic and special sensory fibres. (essentially all the possible types of fibres it could have)
o It provides the posterior 1/3 of the tongue with special sensory and general sensory supply.
o It provides the parotid gland with parasympathetic supply.
o The Glossopharyngeal nerve provides general sensory fibres to the carotid body and sinus which provide information about blood pressure and oxygen saturation respectively.
o It provides the pharynx with general sensory supply, and one muscle of the pharynx, stylopharyngeus (runs from styloid to pharynx) with motor supply.
Where is the vagus nerve (X) and what does it do?
- The glossopharyngeal nerve emerges from the lateral surface of the medulla oblongata with the vagus nerve, they both exit the skull via the jugular foramen.
- The Vagus nerve contains general motor, sensory and parasympathetic fibres.
- The Vagus nerve provides the soft palate, pharynx and oesophagus with motor supply
- The hard palate is composed of the maxilla and palatine bones, posterior to this is the soft palate, this is composed of muscles covered by mucous membrane.
- The soft palate elevates during swallowing to prevent food entering the nasal cavity.
- The muscles of the soft palate are innervated by the Vagus nerve.
- The Vagus nerve provides the larynx with general sensory and motor supply.
- The vagus nerve is the major parasympathetic nerve of the body.
See lecture notes for pictures
Where is the spinal accessory nerve (XI) and what does it do?
- The spinal accessory emerges from the first 5-6 cervical segments and then runs superiorly through the foramen magnum then leaves the skull via the jugular foramen.
- It contains motor fibres.
- Innervates:
o Sternocleidomastoid (if both of these contract then you nod your head)
o Trapezius - Spinal accessory nerve runs through the middle between these muscles
Where is the hypoglossal nerve (XII) and what does it do?
- The hypoglossal nerve emerges from the anterior aspect of the medulla oblongata and runs through the hypoglossal canal.
- It contains motor fibres.
- Innervates the genioglossus muscle in the tongue
- Can test the nerve by asking patient to stick their tongue out
- If they have a lesion in the hypoglossal nerve on one side or the other, then their tongue will point to one side when they stick it out
o For a hypoglossal nerve lesion, the tongue will point towards the lesion (e.g. palsy of left hypoglossal nerve means tongue will point to the left
o If they have a vagus nerve injury, then the opposite is true for the uvula (e.g. palsy of left vagus nerve means uvula will deviate to the right)
What provides sympathetic innervation to the head and neck? What happens when these are disrupted?
- Sympathetic innervation to the head and neck does not come from cranial nerves but from the thoracic region of the spinal cord.
- The sympathetic fibres travel into the head with the ICA.
- Disruption to the ascending sympathetic nerves causes Horner’s syndrome.
o Constricted pupil
o Anhydrosis
o Partial ptosis