The Peripheral Nervous System and Reflex Activity: Part B

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The Peripheral Nervous System and Reflex Activity: Part B 13 The Peripheral Nervous System and Reflex Activity: Part B

Cranial Nerves How many cranial nerves do you have?

How many cranial nerves do you have? Twelve pairs of nerves Most are mixed (have sensory and motor) Two pairs are purely sensory

Cranial Nerves ACTIVITY: With a partner, come up with an acronym for the different cranial nerves. How many can you remember? Can you think of other ways to remember them all?

Cranial Nerves ACTIVITY: With a partner, come up with an acronym for the different cranial nerves. How many can you remember? Can you think of other ways to remember them all? OOO-TTA-FV-GV-AH OOO-TT-AF-VG-VAH OOOTTA-FVGV-AH Break it up in a way that makes sense to you!

Hypoglossal nerve (XII) Filaments of olfactory nerve (I) Frontal lobe Olfactory bulb Olfactory tract Optic nerve (II) Temporal lobe Optic chiasma Infundibulum Optic tract Facial nerve (VII) Oculomotor nerve (III) Vestibulo- cochlear nerve (VIII) Trochlear nerve (IV) Trigeminal nerve (V) Glossopharyngeal nerve (IX) Abducens nerve (VI) Vagus nerve (X) Cerebellum Accessory nerve (XI) Medulla oblongata Hypoglossal nerve (XII) (a) Figure 13.5 (a)

…wow that’s a lot of nerves… So how can we figure out what they all do? Making/using tables/pictures Association and grouping Finding patterns What does this look like?

Good for organization…but we can still make this easier. How? Cranial nerves I – VI Sensory function Motor function PS* fibers I Olfactory Yes (smell) No No II Optic Yes (vision) No No III Oculomotor No Yes Yes IV Trochlear No Yes No V Trigeminal Yes (general sensation) Yes No VI Abducens No Yes No Cranial nerves VII – XII Sensory function Motor function PS* fibers VII Facial Yes (taste) Yes Yes VIII Vestibulocochlear Yes (hearing and balance) Some No IX Glossopharyngeal Yes (taste) Yes Yes X Vagus Yes (taste) Yes Yes XI Accessory No Yes No XII Hypoglossal No Yes No *PS = parasympathetic (b) Figure 13.5 (b)

Group cranial nerves that have both functions I – VI Sensory function Motor function PS* fibers I Olfactory Yes (smell) No No II Optic Yes (vision) No No III Oculomotor No Yes Yes IV Trochlear No Yes No V Trigeminal Yes (general sensation) Yes No OOO-TTA-FV-GV-AH VI Abducens No Yes No Cranial nerves VII – XII Sensory function Motor function PS* fibers VII Facial Yes (taste) Yes Yes VIII Vestibulocochlear Yes (hearing and balance) Some No IX Glossopharyngeal Yes (taste) Yes Yes X Vagus Yes (taste) Yes Yes XI Accessory No Yes No XII Hypoglossal No Yes No *PS = parasympathetic (b) Figure 13.5 (b)

Group cranial nerves that have only sensory functions I – VI Sensory function Motor function PS* fibers I Olfactory Yes (smell) No No II Optic Yes (vision) No No III Oculomotor No Yes Yes IV Trochlear No Yes No V Trigeminal Yes (general sensation) Yes No OOO-TTA-FV-GV-AH VI Abducens No Yes No Cranial nerves VII – XII Sensory function Motor function PS* fibers VII Facial Yes (taste) Yes Yes VIII Vestibulocochlear Yes (hearing and balance) Some No IX Glossopharyngeal Yes (taste) Yes Yes X Vagus Yes (taste) Yes Yes XI Accessory No Yes No XII Hypoglossal No Yes No *PS = parasympathetic (b) Figure 13.5 (b)

Group cranial nerves that have only motor functions I – VI Sensory function Motor function PS* fibers I Olfactory Yes (smell) No No II Optic Yes (vision) No No III Oculomotor No Yes Yes IV Trochlear No Yes No V Trigeminal Yes (general sensation) Yes No OOO-TTA-FV-GV-AH VI Abducens No Yes No Cranial nerves VII – XII Sensory function Motor function PS* fibers VII Facial Yes (taste) Yes Yes VIII Vestibulocochlear Yes (hearing and balance) Some No IX Glossopharyngeal Yes (taste) Yes Yes X Vagus Yes (taste) Yes Yes XI Accessory No Yes No XII Hypoglossal No Yes No *PS = parasympathetic (b) Figure 13.5 (b)

What other pattern(s) can you see in the table? Cranial nerves I – VI Sensory function Motor function PS* fibers I Olfactory Yes (smell) No No II Optic Yes (vision) No No III Oculomotor No Yes Yes IV Trochlear No Yes No OOO-TTA-FV-GV-AH V Trigeminal Yes (general sensation) Yes No VI Abducens No Yes No Cranial nerves VII – XII Sensory function Motor function PS* fibers VII Facial Yes (taste) Yes Yes VIII Vestibulocochlear Yes (hearing and balance) Some No IX Glossopharyngeal Yes (taste) Yes Yes X Vagus Yes (taste) Yes Yes XI Accessory No Yes No XII Hypoglossal No Yes No Figure 13.5 (b) *PS = parasympathetic (b)

OOO-TTA-FV-GV-AH OOO-TTA-FV-GV-AH Notice that only the cranial nerves with motor functions can work with the PS fibers Cranial nerves I – VI Sensory function Motor function PS* fibers I Olfactory Yes (smell) No No II Optic Yes (vision) No No III Oculomotor No Yes Yes IV Trochlear No Yes No V Trigeminal Yes (general sensation) Yes No OOO-TTA-FV-GV-AH OOO-TTA-FV-GV-AH VI Abducens No Yes No Cranial nerves VII – XII Sensory function Motor function PS* fibers VII Facial Yes (taste) Yes Yes VIII Vestibulocochlear Yes (hearing and balance) Some No IX Glossopharyngeal Yes (taste) Yes Yes X Vagus Yes (taste) Yes Yes XI Accessory No Yes No XII Hypoglossal No Yes No Figure 13.5 (b) *PS = parasympathetic (b)

I: The Olfactory Nerves Arise from the olfactory receptor cells Nasal cavity Pass through the cribriform plate of the ethmoid bone Where are these? Pathway terminates in primary olfactory cortex Purely sensory (olfactory) function

Table 13.2

II: The Optic Nerves Arise from the retinas Pass through the optic canals, converge and partially cross over at the optic chiasma Optic tracts continue to the thalamus, where they synapse Optic radiation fibers run to the occipital (visual) cortex Purely sensory (visual) function

Table 13.2

III: The Oculomotor Nerves Fibers extend from the ventral midbrain through the superior orbital fissures to the extrinsic eye muscles Functions: Raising the eyelid Directing the eyeball Constricting the iris (parasympathetic) Controlling lens shape

Table 13.2

IV: The Trochlear Nerves Fibers from the dorsal midbrain enter the orbits via the superior orbital fissures to innervate the superior oblique muscle Primarily a motor nerve that directs the eyeball

Table 13.2

V: The Trigeminal Nerves Largest cranial nerves Fibers extend from pons to face What do you think these divisions do? Where do you think they are located? Three divisions Ophthalmic (V1) Maxillary (V2) Mandibular (V3)

V: The Trigeminal Nerves Largest cranial nerves Fibers extend from pons to face Three divisions Ophthalmic (V1) through superior orbital fissure Maxillary (V2) through the foramen rotundum Mandibular (V3) through the foramen ovale Convey sensory impulses from various areas of the face (V1) and (V2), and supplies motor fibers (V3) for mastication

Table 13.2

Table 13.2

VI: The Abducens Nerves Fibers from the inferior pons enter the orbits via the superior orbital fissures Primarily a motor Innervating the lateral rectus muscle

Table 13.2

VII: The Facial Nerves Fibers from the pons travel through the internal acoustic meatuses, and emerge through the stylomastoid foramina to the lateral aspect of the face Chief motor nerves of the face 5 major branches Motor: facial expression, parasympathetic impulses to lacrimal and salivary glands Sensory: taste from anterior two-thirds of the tongue

Table 13.2

Table 13.2

VIII: The Vestibulocochlear Nerves Afferent fibers from the cochlear division and vestibular division pass from the inner ear, and enter the brain stem at the pons-medulla border Mostly sensory function small motor component for adjustment of sensitivity of receptors

Table 13.2

IX: The Glossopharyngeal Nerves Fibers from the medulla leave the skull via the jugular foramen and run to the throat Motor functions: innervate part of the tongue and pharynx for swallowing, and provide parasympathetic fibers to the parotid salivary glands Sensory functions: fibers conduct taste and general sensory impulses from the pharynx and posterior tongue, and impulses from carotid chemoreceptors and baroreceptors

Table 13.2

X: The Vagus Nerves Only cranial nerves that extend beyond the head and neck region Fibers from the medulla exit the skull via the jugular foramen Most motor fibers are parasympathetic fibers that help regulate the activities of the heart, lungs, and abdominal viscera Sensory fibers carry impulses from thoracic and abdominal viscera, baroreceptors, chemoreceptors, and taste buds of posterior tongue and pharynx

Table 13.2

XI: The Accessory Nerves Formed from ventral rootlets from the C1–C5 region of the spinal cord (not the brain) Rootlets pass into the cranium via each foramen magnum Accessory nerves exit the skull via the jugular foramina to innervate the trapezius and sternocleidomastoid muscles

Table 13.2

XII: The Hypoglossal Nerves Fibers from the medulla exit the skull via the hypoglossal canal Innervate extrinsic and intrinsic muscles of the tongue that contribute to swallowing and speech What do extrinsic and intrinsic mean?

Table 13.2