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12 Cranial Nerve

The document summarizes the 12 cranial nerves and their main functions. It describes that the olfactory nerve transmits smell information to the brain, the optic nerve transmits vision information, and the oculomotor nerve controls most eye muscles. The trigeminal nerve has both motor and sensory roles including sensation to the face. The vestibulocochlear nerve is involved in hearing and balance. The vagus and glossopharyngeal nerves have motor, sensory and parasympathetic roles including sensation in the throat, heart and organs.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
79 views5 pages

12 Cranial Nerve

The document summarizes the 12 cranial nerves and their main functions. It describes that the olfactory nerve transmits smell information to the brain, the optic nerve transmits vision information, and the oculomotor nerve controls most eye muscles. The trigeminal nerve has both motor and sensory roles including sensation to the face. The vestibulocochlear nerve is involved in hearing and balance. The vagus and glossopharyngeal nerves have motor, sensory and parasympathetic roles including sensation in the throat, heart and organs.

Uploaded by

Owing Conejo
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Conejo, Cherry Louie L.

May 1 2020
Con2B

12 Cranial Nerves and its Functions

I. Olfactory nerve

The olfactory nerve transmits information to the brain regarding a person’s sense of smell.

When a person inhales fragrant molecules, olfactory receptors within the nasal passage send
the impulses to the cranial cavity, which then travel to the olfactory bulb.

Specialized olfactory neurons and nerve fibers meet with other nerves, which pass into the
olfactory tract.

The olfactory tract then travels to the frontal lobe and other areas of the brain that are
involved with memory and notation of different smells.

II. Optic nerve


The optic nerves  transmits information to the brain regarding a person’s vision.

When light enters the eye, it hits the retina, which contains rods and cones. These are
photoreceptors that translate signals from light into visual information for the brain.

Cones are located in the central retina and are involved with color vision. Rods are located in
the peripheral retina and are involved with non-color vision.

These photoreceptors carry signal impulses along nerve cells to form the optic nerve. Most
of the fibers of the optic nerve cross into a structure called the optic chiasm. Then, the optic
tract projects to the primary visual cortex in the occipital lobe at the back of the brain. The
occipital lobe is where the brain handles visual information.

III. Oculomotor nerve

The oculomotor nerve helps control muscle movements of the eyes.


The oculomotor nerve provides movement to most of the muscles that move the eyeball
and upper eyelid, known as extraocular muscles.

The oculomotor nerve also helps with involuntary functions of the eye:

 The sphincter pupillae muscle automatically constricts the pupil to allow less light
into the eye when the light is bright. When it is dark, the muscle relaxes to allow
more light to enter.
 The ciliary muscles help the lens adjust to short range and long range vision. This
happens automatically when a person looks at near or far objects.

IV. Trochlear nerve

The Trochlear nerve is also involved in eye movement.

The trochlear nerve, like the oculomotor nerve, originates in the midbrain. It powers the
contralateral superior oblique muscle that allows the eye to point downward and inward.

V. Trigeminal nerve

The trigeminal nerve is the largest cranial nerve and has both motor and sensory functions.

Its motor functions help a person to chew and clench the teeth and gives sensation to
muscles in the tympanic membrane of the ear.

Its sensory division has three parts that connect to sensory receptor sites on the face:

 The ophthalmic part gives sensation to parts of the eyes, including the cornea,
mucosa in the nose, and skin on the nose, the eyelid, and the forehead.
 The maxillary part gives sensation to the middle third of the face, side of the nose,
upper teeth, and lower eyelid.
 The mandibular part gives sensation to the lower third of the face, the tongue,
mucosa in the mouth, and lower teeth.

Trigeminal nerve is a common disorder of the trigeminal nerve that can cause intense pain
and facial tics.
VI. Abducens nerve

The abducens nerve also helps control eye movements.

It helps the lateral rectus muscle, which is one of the extraocular muscles, to turn the gaze
outward.

The abducens nerve starts in the pons of the brainstem, enters an area called Dorello’s
canal, travels through the cavernous sinus, and ends at the lateral rectus muscle within the
bony orbit.

VII. Facial nerve

The facial nerve  also has both motor and sensory functions.

The facial nerve is made up of four nuclei that serve different functions:

 movement of muscles that produce facial expression


 movement of the lacrimal, submaxillary, and submandibular glands
 the sensation of the external ear
 the sensation of taste

The four nuclei originate in the pons and medulla and join together to travel to the
geniculate ganglion.

Bless palsy is a common disorder of the facial nerve, which causes paralysis on one side of
the face and possibly loss of taste sensation.

VIII. Vestibulocochlear nerve

Thevestibulococlear is involved with a person’s hearing and balance.

The vestibulocochlear nerve contains two components:


 The vestibular nerve helps the body sense changes in the position of the head with
regard to gravity. The body uses this information to maintain balance.
 The cochlear nerve helps with hearing. Specialized inner hair cells and the basilar
membrane vibrate in response to sounds and determine the frequency and
magnitude of the sound.

These fibers combine in the pons and exit the skull via the internal acoustic meatus in the
temporal bone.

IX. Glossopharyngeal nerve

The glossopharyngeal nerve possesses both motor and sensory functions.

 The sensory function receives information from the throat, tonsils, middle ear, and
back of the tongue. It is also involved with the sensation of taste for the back of the
tongue.
 The motor division provides movement to the stylopharyngeus, which is a muscle
that allows the throat to shorten and widen.

The glossopharyngeal nerve starts in the medulla oblongata in the brain and leaves the skull
through the jugular foramen, which leads to the tympanic nerve.

X. Vagus nerve

The vagus nerve has a range of functions, providing motor, sensory, and parasympathetic


functions.

 The sensory part provides sensation to the outer part of the ear, the throat, the
heart, abdominal organs. It also plays a role in taste sensation.
 The motor part provides movement to the throat and soft palate.
 The parasympathetic function regulates heart rhythm and innervates the smooth
muscles in the airway, lungs, and gastrointestinal tract.

The vagus nerve is the longest cranial nerve as it starts in the medulla and extends to the
abdomen.
XI. Accessory nerveShare on PinterestThe accessory nerve provides motor function to the
neck.

The accessory nerve provides motor function to some muscles in the neck:

It controls the sternocleidomastoid and trapezius muscles that allow a person to rotate,
extend, and flex the neck and shoulders.

The accessory nerve separates into spinal and cranial parts.

The spinal component starts in the spinal cord and travels into the skull through the foramen
magnum. From there, it meets the cranial component of the accessory nerve and exits the
skull along the internal carotid artery.

The cranial part of the accessory nerve combines with the vagus nerve.

XII. Hypoglossal nerve

Thehypoglossal nerve is a motor nerve that supplies the tongue muscles.

The hypoglossal nerve originates in the medulla.

Disorders of the hypoglossal nerve can cause paralysis of the tongue, most often occurring
on one side.

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