Cranial Nerve Work Sheet
Answer the following questions using your memory, the syllabus, your textbook and whatever other reference you want.
- Why are CN’s numbered the way they are numbered?
- What can you glean from each CN simply by its name?
- Olfactor n.
- Optic n.
- Oculomotor n.
- Trochlear n.
- Trigeminal n.
- Abducens n.
- Facial n.
- Vestibulocochlear n.
- Glossopharyngeal n.
- Vagus n.
- Spinal accessory n.
- Hypoglossal n.
- What CN’s contain the following?
- Only sensory neurons
- Only motor neurons
- Mixed neurons
- Somatic motor neurons
- Branchial motor neurons
- Visceral (parasympathetic) neurons
- General sensory neurons
- Special sensory neurons
- Visceral sensory neurons
- Identify the CN’s and/or vessels that traverse the following:
- Cribriform foramina
- Optic canal
- Superior orbital fissure
- Internal acoustic meatus
- Through the lateral wall of the cavernous sinus
- Jugular foramen
- Hypoglossal canal
- Foramen rotundum
- Foramen ovale
- Foramen magnum
- Greater petrosal hiatus
- Lesser petrosal hiatus
- Foramen spinosum
- Identify the CN that would most likely result in the following:
- Loss of hearing
- Abnormal/alteration of taste on the posterior tongue
- Loss of smell
- Miosis
- Loss of sensation over the forehead
- Downward and lateral gaze deviation
- Weakness in chewing
- Loss of balance
- Inability to look down and in
- Ptosis
- Blindness
- Loss of sensation over the skin of the nose
- Vocal cord paralysis
- Loss of salivation
- When saying “Ahhhh” during a physical exam a patients uvula deviates to the left
- Facial palsy
- Shoulder shrugging weakness
- During a physical exam a patient is instructed to protrude her tongue and when she does her tongue always deviates to the left
- Abnormal/alteration of taste on the anterior tongue
- Dilated pupils
- Identify the region of the brain where the nuclei of CN’s III-XII are associated (CN I and II are extensions of the brain rather than true peripheral nerves and are therefore not associated with nuclei in the brainstem):
- Midbrain
- Pons
- Medulla oblongata
- Identify what cell bodies are housed in each of the following ganglia:
- Ciliary
- Geniculate
- Glossopharyngeal
- Otic
- Pterygopalatine
- Submandibular
- Superior cervical
- Vagus
- What is the only CN to be affected by multiple sclerosis (MS)? Why?
- Identify the CN that innervates each of the following:
- Submandibular salivary gland
- Parotid gland
- Lacrimal gland
- Palatal glands
- Tongue movement
- All six eye muscles
- Elevation of the upper eyelid
- A woman involved in a motor vehicle accident cannot turn her head to the left and has right shoulder droop. Which nerve is damaged?
- Patient cannot blink his eye or seal his lips on the right side. Which nerve is damaged?
- What are the 3 classic signs of Horner’s syndrome? (Hint: PAM is Horny) Explain what could cause a patient to present with each of these findings.
- Describe each of the following reflexes and identify the CN’s/nerves responsible for sensory and motor limbs of each reflex:
- Corneal reflex
- Cough reflex
- Gag reflex
- Pupillary reflex
- Accommodation reflex of the lens