Final Exam Review Flashcards
Olfactory Nerve
Cranial nerve I. Sensory nerve. Carries impulses for the sense of smell
Optic Nerve
Cranial nerve II. Sensory nerve. Carries impulses for the sense of sight
Oculomotor Nerve
Cranial nerve III. Motor nerve. Responsible for constriction of pupils and accommodation of lens for near vision
Trochlear Nerve
Cranial nerve IV. Motor nerve. Responsible for eye movement. Upward and downward rotation of the eye.
Trigeminal Nerve
Cranial nerve V. Mixed nerve. Sensory: Supplies the cutaneous and proprioceptive sensation of the skin, muscles, and joints of the face and mouth. Also, sensory nerve of teeth.
Motor: Responsible for the movement of tongue/ muscles for mastication
Abducens Nerve
Cranial nerve VI. Motor nerve. Responsible for the closing and opening of the eyeball. Responsible for lateral movements of the eye
Facial Nerve
Cranial nerve VII. Mixed nerve. Sensory: Responsible for sensation from tongue and soft palate. Supplies taste to anterior 2/3 of tongue.
Motor: Supplies muscles of facial expression
Auditory Nerve
Cranial nerve VIII. Sensory nerve. Responsible for sensation of hearing. Also plays a major role in equilibrium
Glossopharyngeal Nerve
Cranial nerve IX. Mixed nerve. Sensory: Supplies tonsils, pharynx, and soft palate.
Motor: Controls muscles of pharynx
Vagus Nerve
Cranial nerve X. Mixed nerve.
Sensory: Supplies pinna, pharynx, larynx, and viscera.
Motor: Controls muscles of tongue, pharynx, larynx, and smooth muscles of viscera. Also does vocal fold vibration
Accessory Nerve
Cranial nerve XI. Motor nerve. Controls muscles of neck, pharynx, larynx, and soft palate. Enervates neck muscles
Hypoglossal Nerve
Cranial nerve XII. Motor nerve. Supplies strap muscles of the neck and supplies the intrinsic and extrinsic muscles of the tongue. Mostly associated with tongue movement
diploe
Middle spongey layer of the calvarium. Gives the skull strength while being light and enhances resiliency of the skull. Acts like pin cushion when skull fractures
Subarachnoid Cisterns
Openings in the subarachnoid space. Filled with cerebrospinal fluid. Some areas have more fluid than others.
Hydrocephaly
Accumulation of excessive amount of cerebrospinal fluid in the brain, which causes the brain to expand outward. Skull expands outward with brain. In adults, the skull has no give and the brain crushes itself.
Microcephaly
Infant skull fuses too early. The head is atypically small and results in brain damage. Brain’s growth is confided.
Dural Reflections
Sheet like projections of dura mater into the brain itself. Function to provide additional support and protection of the brain.
Falx Cerebri
Dural reflection that goes into longitudinal fissure and separates the two hemispheres from one another
Falx Cerebelli
Dural reflection that projects and separates the two cerebellar hemispheres
Tentorium Cerebelli
Dural reflection that projects into gap between cerebellum and brain. Separates occipital lobe from cerebellum
Diaphragma Sella
Forms boundary between hypothalamus and inner skull
Meninges
Three layer structure that is composed of non nervous tissue which surrounds and adheres to brain and spinal cord
Dura Mater
The outermost layer of meninges. Thick two layered structure that adheres firmly to inner surface of skull
Periosteum
Outermost layer of dura mater. Tough tissue that covers bone. Adheres to inner skull
Meningeal Dura
Tightly adheres to next layer of meninges, arachnoid mater
Arachnoid Mater
Thin, semitransparent membrane. Tightly attached to meningeal dura.
Pia Mater
Closely adheres to the brain. Follows brains nooks and crannies. A limiting membrane. Gives brain its pinkish color due to lots of blood vessels.
Subarachnoid Space
Sends arachnoid villi into venous sinuses, which is important and plays a role in circulation of spinal fluid. Below the arachnoid mater filled with cerebrospinal fluid. Only typical occurring fluid filled space outside the brain. Does typically exist.
Subdural Space
Potential space between inner layer of dura mater and arachnoid mater. Usually doesn’t exist
Epidural Space
Potential space between cranium and outer layer of dura mater. Usually doesn’t exist
Subdural Hematoma
A vein tears and it bleeds and creates a space between the meningeal dura and arachnoid mater
Epidural Hematoma
Meningeal artery tears and fills with blood. Crushes brain outward in.
Choroid Plexus
A specialized collection of epithelial cells and you’ll find it in an area of each ventricle of the brain. Always producing cerebrospinal fluid.
Circulation of Cerebrospinal Fluid
Starts in lateral ventricles. Then passes through intervertebral foramen and goes to 3rd ventricle. Then through cerebral aqueduct into 4th ventricle. Exits ventricular system via 4th ventricle apertures and fills up subarachnoid space. At various points, the arachnoid villi sucks up cerebrospinal fluid and deposits it on venous sinuses of dura mater, then drained back to heart via jugular vein.