formative Flashcards
Cranial nerve 1 facts
- has only afferent component
- if damaged, will result in anosmia on the ipsilateral side
- enters the cranial cavity via small holes in the cribriform plate of the ethmoid bone
- is commonly damaged in fractures to the anterior cranial fossa
Cranial nerve 2
- can be tested in the unconscious patient by observing pupillary constriction in response to light (pupillary reflex afferent limb via retino-hypothalamic tract)
- enters the skull via the optic canal
- first joins the opposite cranial nerve II within the optic chiasm
- Its fibres are closely related to the lateral geniculate body
- A lesion affecting the left optic nerve will result in total blindness in the left eye
CN 3/4/5 key facts
- all take a course which runs through the cavernous sinus
- CN III carries parasympathetic fibres (from Edinger-Westphal nucleus in tegmentum to the ciliary muscles & sphincter pupillary muscle
- Damage of CN III will lead to ptosis of the eyelid on the same side
- Damage to the CN VI will result in the inability to abduct the affected eye
- A person with CN IV damage will complain of double vision as they look down
Roles of the CNIII in eyes
- Eye movement
- Pupil constriction
- Maintains open eyelid (levator palpebrae superioris)
Role of CNVI and CNIV in eyes
- CNVI: lateral rectus (abducts)
- CNIV: superior oblique (depress + adducts)
Facts about CNV
- is sensory and motor
- passes through the superior orbital fissure (ophth)/rotundum (max)/ovale (man)
- Damage will result in the loss of the corneal reflex on the affected side
Facts about CN VII
- Runs a course which is closely related to the middle ear
- Exits skull via the internal auditory meatus
- Has its nucleus in the tegmentum (not tectum) of the pons
Branches of CNVII
- ) Branchial motor
- ) Visceral motor
- ) Special sensory
- ) General sensory
Role of branchial motor
Supplies muscles of facial expression/posterior belly of digastric muscle/stylohyoid/stapedius
Role of visceral motor
Parasympathetic innervation of the lacrimal/submandibular/sublingual glands as well as mucous membranes of nasopharynx/hard + soft palate
Role of special sensory
Taste sensation from the anterior 2/3 of tongue/hard and soft palate
Role of general sensory
General sensation from the skin of the concha of the auricle and from a small area behind the ear
Five major facial branches (In parotid gland) from top to bottom
- ) Temporal
- ) Zygomatic
- ) Buccal
- ) Marginal mandibular
- ) Cervical
- Ten Zebras Buggered My Cat
Key facts about CN VIII
- concerned with hearing and balance
- exits the cranial cavity via the internal auditory meatus
- when diseased it may cause rapid eye movements: nystagmus
- with complete damage, when a tuning fork is placed in the middle of the forehead, the sound is heard best on the opposite side as the damage
- a tumour of the nerve may cause paralysis of the muscles of facial expression
Key facts about CNIX
- sensory and motor
- carries parasympathetic fibres to the parotid glands
- Supplies muscles of the hypoglossal and pharynx
- Leaves the cranium through the jugular foramen
Key facts about cranial nerve X
- Made up of both sensory and motor components
- Carries parasympathetic fibres to the heart/lungs/bowel
Leaves brain at the level of the medulla - Has a branch which supplies motor control to all pharyngeal muscle EXCEPT stylopharyngeus
- Causes decreased heart rate and blood pressure when stimulated
Facts about the cranial nerve XI
- carries purely motor fibres
- has two roots: cranial and spinal
- runs in close proximity to the internal jugular vein
- exits the cranial cavity via the internal jugular foramen alongside the spinal cord
- Injury to the nerve causes paralysis of the sternocleidomastoid and superior trapezius muscles on the same side of the lesion
Key facts about CN XII
- Contains motor component for tongue muscles
- supplies extrinsic and intrinsic muscles of the tongue
- leaves the cranial cavity via the hypoglossal canal
- its nerve cell bodies are located within the medulla
- damage to the nerve will cause paralysis of the ipsilateral half of the tongue
Key facts about the spinothalamic tract
- Is
- Conveys nociceptive information to the contralateral thalamus
- Is found in the anterolateral white matter of the spinal cord
- conveys nociceptive information contralaterally up the spinal cord (crosses over as ascends over 2-3 vertebral segments)
- after they desscate the fibres of the spinothalamic tract synapse in the thalamus first
Key facts about brown-sequard syndrome
- get a right-sided hemiplegia
- lower motor neuron paralysis at the level of C7 on the ipsilateral side
- loss of two point discrimination appreciation below the level of the lesion on the right
- loss of pain + temp appreciation at all segments below the level of the lesion on the left
- loss of proprioceptive information conveyed to the spinocerebellar tract
Key facts about the middle ear
- middle ear is fillef with air
- conductive deafness is a reduction in the mechaninical transmission of sound waves to the round window
- The chain of three ossicles have synovial joints between them
- the stiffness of the ossicular chain can be modified by two muscles of the middle ear