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Cranial Nerves and Nuclei

Cranial Nerves and Nuclei

Cranial Nerves and Nuclei

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CN Overview & Sensory Trio - The Brain's Twelve Wires

  • 12 pairs of cranial nerves (CNs) connect brain to head, neck, trunk. Emerge from brain/brainstem; exit skull via specific foramina.
  • Functional Types:
    • Sensory (afferent)
    • Motor (efferent)
    • Mixed (both)
  • Purely Sensory Nerves (CN I, II, VIII):
    • CN I (Olfactory): Smell. Foramen: Cribriform plate.
    • CN II (Optic): Vision. Foramen: Optic canal.
    • CN VIII (Vestibulocochlear): Hearing & equilibrium. Foramen: Internal acoustic meatus.
    • ⭐ > Anosmia (loss of smell) is a key symptom of CN I damage, often from head trauma affecting the cribriform plate. Cranial Nerves and Skull Foraminaoka

Oculomotor Nerves - Eye Control Crew

  • CN III (Oculomotor):
    • 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: Eye "down & out", ptosis, mydriasis.
  • CN IV (Trochlear):
    • Motor: Superior Oblique (SO). Action: intorts, depresses, abducts eye.
    • Lesion: Vertical diplopia (worse looking down/in), head tilt away from lesion.
  • CN VI (Abducens):
    • Motor: Lateral Rectus (LR). Action: abducts eye.
    • Lesion: Horizontal diplopia, medial deviation (convergent squint).
  • 📌 Mnemonic: LR6SO4R3 (Lateral Rectus by CN VI, Superior Oblique by CN IV, Rest of muscles by CN III).

Extraocular muscles of the right eye

⭐ Complete CN III palsy: eye is deviated "down and out" due to the unopposed actions of the lateral rectus (CN VI) and superior oblique (CN IV) muscles.

Trigeminal & Facial - Face's Form & Function

  • Trigeminal (CN V): Chief facial sensory; motor for mastication.

    • Branches: V1 (Ophthalmic), V2 (Maxillary), V3 (Mandibular - motor too).
    • Sensory: Face, cornea, oral/nasal mucosa, ant. 2/3 tongue (general).
    • Motor (V3): Mastication muscles, Mylohyoid, Ant. Digastric, Tensor Tympani/Veli Palatini. Trigeminal nerve branches and sensory areas
  • Facial (CN VII): Facial expression muscles; taste (ant. 2/3 tongue); gland parasympathetics.

    • Motor: Facial expression, Stapedius, Stylohyoid, Post. Digastric.
    • Parasympathetic: Lacrimal, Submandibular, Sublingual glands.
    • Special Sensory: Taste (ant. 2/3 tongue - chorda tympani).
    • 📌 Mnemonic (Functions): Face, Autonomics, Taste, Ear.

    ⭐ Bell's Palsy: LMN CN VII lesion; ipsilateral total facial paralysis (forehead affected). UMN spares forehead.

Lower Cranial Nerves - Throat, Talk & Turn

  • CN IX (Glossopharyngeal):
    • Motor: Stylopharyngeus (swallow).
    • Parasymp: Parotid (saliva).
    • Sensory: Taste post. 1/3 tongue, pharynx, carotid S/B.
    • Lesion: ↓gag (aff), ↓taste post. 1/3.
  • CN X (Vagus):
    • Motor: Pharynx/larynx (swallow, speech).
    • Parasymp: Thoraco-abd. viscera.
    • Sensory: Taste epiglottis, visceral.
    • Lesion: Hoarse, dysphagia, uvula → opp. side.
  • CN XI (Accessory):
    • Motor: SCM, Trapezius.
    • Function: Head turn (opp.), shrug.
    • Lesion: Shoulder droop, weak head turn.
  • CN XII (Hypoglossal):
    • Motor: Tongue muscles (not palatoglossus).
    • Function: Tongue movement.
    • Lesion: Tongue → lesion side.

Cranial Nerves and Innervation

📌 Foramina: IX,X,XI-Jugular; XII-Hypoglossal.

⭐ Vagus (X) lesion: uvula → contralat.; recurrent laryngeal N. injury → hoarseness.

CN Nuclei Columns - Brainstem Command

  • Brainstem CN nuclei: organized in functional columns.
  • Medial (Motor) Columns:
    • GSE: III, IV, VI, XII (Midline motor)
    • SVE: V, VII, IX, X, XI
    • GVE: III, VII, IX, X
  • Lateral (Sensory) Columns:
    • GVA/SVA: VII, IX, X (Visceral, Taste)
    • GSA: V, VII, IX, X (Somatic)
    • SSA: VIII (Auditory, Vestibular) Cranial nerve nuclei in the brainstem

⭐ Sulcus limitans divides medial motor from lateral sensory columns.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Parasympathetic fibers are carried by CN III, VII, IX, X.
  • Jugular foramen transmits CN IX, X, XI; Superior Orbital Fissure for CN III, IV, V1, VI.
  • Bell's Palsy (CN VII LMN lesion) causes ipsilateral total facial paralysis.
  • Gag reflex: Afferent CN IX, Efferent CN X. Corneal reflex: Afferent V1, Efferent VII.
  • Cavernous sinus contains CN III, IV, V1, V2, VI and Internal Carotid Artery.
  • CN XII lesion: Tongue deviates towards lesion. CN XI lesion: Shoulder droop.

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