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Num Mark Subjects (1-7 of 7) Year Entries
17 Found
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Cranial nerves -- See Nerves, Cranial


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2 Cranial Nerves   8
3 Cranial Nerves -- anatomy & histology.   4
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Cranial Nerves, Fifth -- See Trigeminal Nerve


The 5th and largest cranial nerve. The trigeminal nerve is a mixed motor and sensory nerve. The larger sensory part forms the ophthalmic, mandibular, and maxillary nerves which carry afferents sensitive to external or internal stimuli from the skin, muscles, and joints of the face and mouth and from the teeth. Most of these fibers originate from cells of the TRIGEMINAL GANGLION and project to the TRIGEMINAL NUCLEUS of the brain stem. The smaller motor part arises from the brain stem trigeminal motor nucleus and innervates the muscles of mastication
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5 Cranial Nerves -- pathology. : Cranial nerves : anatomy, pathology, imaging / Devin K. Binder, D. Christian Sonne, Nancy J. Fischbein  2010 1
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Cranial Nerves, Second -- See Optic Nerve


The 2nd cranial nerve which conveys visual information from the RETINA to the brain. The nerve carries the axons of the RETINAL GANGLION CELLS which sort at the OPTIC CHIASM and continue via the OPTIC TRACTS to the brain. The largest projection is to the lateral geniculate nuclei; other targets include the SUPERIOR COLLICULI and the SUPRACHIASMATIC NUCLEI. Though known as the second cranial nerve, it is considered part of the CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM
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Cranial Nerves, Tenth -- See Vagus Nerve


The 10th cranial nerve. The vagus is a mixed nerve which contains somatic afferents (from skin in back of the ear and the external auditory meatus), visceral afferents (from the pharynx, larynx, thorax, and abdomen), parasympathetic efferents (to the thorax and abdomen), and efferents to striated muscle (of the larynx and pharynx)
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