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Chapter 14: The Brain and Cranial Nerves

Chapter 14: The Brain and Cranial Nerves. Major Parts of the Brain. Brain stem- continuation of the spinal cord; consists of the medulla oblongata, pons and midbrain. Cerebellum- second largest part of the brain. Diencephalon- gives rise to thalamus, hypothalamus and epithalamus.

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Chapter 14: The Brain and Cranial Nerves

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  1. Chapter 14: The Brain and Cranial Nerves

  2. Major Parts of the Brain Brain stem- continuation of the spinal cord; consists of the medulla oblongata, pons and midbrain. Cerebellum- second largest part of the brain. Diencephalon- gives rise to thalamus, hypothalamus and epithalamus. Cerebrum- largest part of the brain.

  3. The Brain

  4. Protective Coverings of the Brain The cranium The cranial meninges: dura mater, arachnoid mater and pia mater.

  5. Extensions of the Dura Mater

  6. Functional Organization of the Cerebral Cortex: Sensory Areas

  7. Functional Organization of the Cerebral Cortex: Motor Areas Primary motor area- precentral gyrus. Broca’s speech area- left cerebral hemisphere.

  8. Functional Organization of the Cerebral Cortex: Association Areas Somatosensory association area- posterior to primary somatosensory area. Visual association area- occipital lobe. Auditory association area- temporal lobe. Wernicke’s area- left temporal and parietal lobes. Prefrontal cortex- anterior portion of the frontal lobe.

  9. Hemispheric Lateralization

  10. Cranial Nerves 12 pairs. Sensory, motor and mixed nerves. Name as well as roman numeric numbers to identify the nerves. On Old Olympuses Topmost Top AFinn Viewed Germanys Vines And Hops Mnemonic device

  11. Olfactory (I) Nerve Sensory nerve. Sense of smell. Olfactory cells converge to become olfactory nerve.

  12. Optic (II) Nerve Sensory nerve. Ganglion cells in the retina of each eye join to form an optic nerve. Nerve of vision.

  13. Oculomotor (III) Nerve Motor cranial nerve. Originates in the midbrain. Supply extrinsic eye muscles to control movements of the eyeball and upper eyelid.

  14. Trochlear (IV) Nerve Motor cranial nerve. Smallest of the 12 cranial nerves. Origin: midbrain. Controls movement of the eyeball.

  15. Trigeminal (V) nerve Largest cranial nerve. Mixed nerve. Three branches: opthalmic, maxillary and mandibular. Deal with sensation of touch, pain and temperature. Motor axons supply muscles of mastication.

  16. Abducens (VI) Nerve Motor cranial nerve. Originates from the pons. Cause abduction of the eyeball (lateral rotation).

  17. Facial (VII) Nerve Mixed cranial nerve. Sensory portion extends from the taste buds of the anterior two-thirds of the tongue. Motor portion arises from the pons and deal with facial expression.

  18. Vestibulocochlear (VIII) Nerve Sensory cranial nerve. Originates in the inner ear. Vestibular branch carries impulses for equilibrium. Cochlear branch carries impulses for hearing.

  19. Glossopharyngeal (IX) Nerve Mixed cranial nerve. Sensory axons carry signals from the taste buds of the posterior one-third of the tongue. Motor neurons arise from the medulla and deal with the release of saliva.

  20. Vagus (X) Nerve

  21. Vagus (X) Nerve Mixed cranial nerve. Distributed from the head and neck into the thorax and abdomen. Sensory neurons deal with a variety of sensations such as proprioception, and stretching. Motor neurons arise from the medulla and supply muscles of the pharynx, larynx, and soft palate that are involved in swallowing and vocalization.

  22. Accessory (XI) Nerve Motor cranial nerve. Divided into cranial accessory and spinal accessory nerves. Supplies sternocleidomastoid and trapezius muscles to coordinate head movements.

  23. Hypoglossal (XII) Nerve Motor cranial nerve. Conduct nerve impulses for speech and swallowing.

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