Cranial Nerves

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Cranial Nerves Overview - The Brain's Twelve Messengers

Cranial nerves anterior view with labels and Roman numerals

  • 12 pairs of nerves originating from the brain/brainstem; numbered I-XII (rostral to caudal).
  • Classified by primary function: Sensory (S), Motor (M), or Mixed (B).
    • Sensory (afferent): I, II, VIII
    • Motor (efferent): III, IV, VI, XI, XII
    • Mixed (both): V, VII, IX, X
  • 📌 Names Mnemonic: "Oh Oh Oh To Touch And Feel Very Good Velvet, Ah Heaven"
  • 📌 Types Mnemonic: "Some Say Marry Money But My Brother Says Big Brains Matter More"

⭐ The Trochlear nerve (IV) is the smallest cranial nerve by axon count and the only one to emerge from the dorsal aspect of the brainstem. It also has the longest intracranial course among cranial nerves despite its small size relative to others like Trigeminal (V) which is the largest.

Sensory & Special Senses - The Input Crew

  • Special Senses: 📌 Special Senses (I, II, VIII): 1 Nose, 2 Eyes, 8 Ears (hearing/balance).
    • CN I (Olfactory): Smell. Cribriform plate. Anosmia.
    • CN II (Optic): Vision. Optic canal. Visual field defects.
    • CN VIII (Vestibulocochlear): Hearing (cochlear), Balance (vestibular). IAM. Deafness, vertigo.
  • General & Taste (Mixed Function Nerves):
    • CN V (Trigeminal): Major facial sensation (V1, V2, V3).
      • V1 (Ophthalmic): SOF.
      • V2 (Maxillary): Foramen Rotundum.
      • V3 (Mandibular): Foramen Ovale. Gen. sensation ant. 2/3 tongue.
    • CN VII (Facial): Taste ant. 2/3 tongue (chorda tympani).
    • CN IX (Glossopharyngeal): Taste & gen. sens. post. 1/3 tongue. Carotid sinus/body.
    • CN X (Vagus): Taste epiglottis. Sensation pharynx, larynx.

The 12 cranial nerves

⭐ Corneal reflex: Afferent CN V1, Efferent CN VII.

Oculomotor & Other Pure Motor - The Movement Masters

  • CN III (Oculomotor Nerve):
    • Motor: Superior Rectus (SR), Inferior Rectus (IR), Medial Rectus (MR), Inferior Oblique (IO), Levator Palpebrae Superioris (LPS).
    • Parasympathetic: Sphincter pupillae (miosis), ciliary muscle (accommodation).
    • Lesion: Ptosis, eye deviated "down & out", mydriasis, diplopia.
  • CN IV (Trochlear Nerve):
    • Motor: Superior Oblique (SO) - intorts, depresses, abducts eye.
    • Lesion: Vertical diplopia (worse on looking down & in), head tilt away from lesion.
  • CN VI (Abducens Nerve):
    • Motor: Lateral Rectus (LR) - abducts eye.
    • Lesion: Horizontal diplopia (worse on looking to side of lesion), esotropia.
  • Eye Muscles Mnemonic: 📌 (LR6SO4)R3 - Lateral Rectus CN6, Superior Oblique CN4, Rest CN3.
  • CN XI (Accessory Nerve):
    • Motor: Sternocleidomastoid (SCM), Trapezius.
    • Lesion: ↓ Contralateral head turn (SCM), shoulder droop, ↓ shrugging (Trapezius).
  • CN XII (Hypoglossal Nerve):
    • Motor: Intrinsic & extrinsic tongue muscles (except palatoglossus).
    • Lesion: Tongue deviates towards lesion side on protrusion; fasciculations, atrophy.

⭐ In CN III palsy, pupil involvement (mydriasis) often suggests a compressive lesion (e.g., Posterior Communicating Artery aneurysm), while pupil sparing typically points to microvascular ischemia (e.g., diabetes mellitus).

Cranial Nerves and Nuclei Diagram

Mixed Function Nerves - The Versatile Veterans

  • CN V (Trigeminal):
    • Sensory: Face, scalp, cornea, oral/nasal cavities.
    • Motor: Muscles of mastication (masseter, temporalis), tensor tympani.
  • CN VII (Facial):
    • Sensory: Taste (anterior 2/3 tongue); skin of external ear.
    • Motor: Facial expression muscles; stapedius.
    • Parasympathetic: Lacrimal, submandibular, sublingual glands.
  • CN IX (Glossopharyngeal):
    • Sensory: Taste (posterior 1/3 tongue); pharynx, tonsil, middle ear; carotid body/sinus.
    • Motor: Stylopharyngeus muscle.
    • Parasympathetic: Parotid gland.
  • CN X (Vagus): "The Wanderer"
    • Sensory: Viscera (thoracic/abdominal); pharynx, larynx, external ear; taste (epiglottis).
    • Motor: Pharynx, larynx, palate muscles.
    • Parasympathetic: Thoracic/abdominal viscera; ↓ heart rate. ⭐ > The gag reflex tests both CN IX (afferent sensory limb) and CN X (efferent motor limb). Cranial Nerves Overview 📌 Mnemonic (Type): "Some Say Marry Money But My Brother Says Big Brains Matter More" (V, VII, IX, X = Both).

High-Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • CN III, VII, IX, X carry parasympathetic fibers.
  • Trigeminal (CN V): Largest CN; key for facial sensation & mastication muscles.
  • Facial (CN VII) palsy: Bell's palsy (LMN); UMN lesion spares forehead.
  • Jugular foramen transmits CN IX (Glossopharyngeal), X (Vagus), XI (Accessory).
  • Gag reflex (afferent CN IX, efferent CN X); Corneal reflex (afferent CN V1, efferent CN VII).
  • Functional types: Sensory (CN I, II, VIII); Motor (CN III, IV, VI, XI, XII); Mixed (CN V, VII, IX, X).

Practice Questions: Cranial Nerves

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Which cranial nerve emerges from the dorsal aspect of the brainstem?

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Flashcards: Cranial Nerves

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Special Somatic Afferent: Cranial Nerves _____

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Special Somatic Afferent: Cranial Nerves _____

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