Cranial Nerves

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Anatomy › Cranial Nerves

Questions 1 - 10
1

Which cranial nerve(s) supply taste sensation to the tongue?

VII and IX

VII only

IX only

VII and X

IX and X

Explanation

Cranial nerves VII and IX supply taste sensation to the tongue. Cranal nerve VII (facial) supplies taste to the anterior two-thirds of the tongue and cranial nerve IX (glossopharyngeal) supplies somatosensation and taste to the posterior one-third of the tongue.

2

Which cranial nerve is involved with vision?

Optic nerve

Oculomotor nerve

Trochlear nerve

Abducens nerve

Explanation

Though all of these nerves are involved with the eye, only one of them is involved with vision. The optic nerve (cranial nerve II) has a sensory function, allowing us to see. The oculomotor nerve (cranial nerve III) has a motor function, allowing eyelid and eyeball movement. The trochlear nerve (cranial nerve IV) also has a motor function, allowing the eye to turn downward and laterally. Lastly, the abducens nerve (cranial nerve VI) also has a motor function, allowing the eye to turn laterally.

3

The frontal lobe, thalamus, midbrain, pons, and medulla all house specific cranial nerve nuclei.

Which cranial nerves originate in the pons?

V, VI, VII, VIII

VI, VII, VIII, IX

IV, V, VI, VII

VII, VIII, IX, X

IV, V, VI

Explanation

The twelve cranial nerves and their origins are given below:

I-Olfactory nerve; origin: frontal lobe

II-Optic nerve; origin: thalamus

III-Ophthalmic nerve; origin: midbrain

IV-Trochlear nerve; origin: midbrain

V-Trigeminal nerve; origin: pons

VI-Abducens nerve; origin: pons

VII-Facial nerve; origin: pons

VIII-Vestibulocochlear nerve; origin: pons

IX-Glossopharyngeal nerve; origin: medulla

X-Vagus nerve; origin: medulla

XI-Spinal Accessory nerve; origin: medulla

XII-Hypoglossal nerve; origin: medulla

The nerves to originate in the pons are V, VI, VII, and VIII (the trigeminal, abducens, facial, and vestibulocochlear nerves).

4

Which cranial nerve is responsible for controlling the muscles that move the tongue?

Hypoglossal

Trochlear

Optic

Vestibulocochlear

Abducens

Explanation

Cranial nerve XII, the hypoglossal nerve, is responsible for controlling muscles that move the tongue. The vestibulocochlear nerve is responsible for sound and balance. The abducens and trochlear are responsible for controlling extraocular muscles. The optic nerve conveys information from the photoreceptor cells of the retina of the eye.

5

The frontal lobe, thalamus, midbrain, pons, and medulla all house specific cranial nerve nuclei.

Which cranial nerves originate in the pons?

V, VI, VII, VIII

VI, VII, VIII, IX

IV, V, VI, VII

VII, VIII, IX, X

IV, V, VI

Explanation

The twelve cranial nerves and their origins are given below:

I-Olfactory nerve; origin: frontal lobe

II-Optic nerve; origin: thalamus

III-Ophthalmic nerve; origin: midbrain

IV-Trochlear nerve; origin: midbrain

V-Trigeminal nerve; origin: pons

VI-Abducens nerve; origin: pons

VII-Facial nerve; origin: pons

VIII-Vestibulocochlear nerve; origin: pons

IX-Glossopharyngeal nerve; origin: medulla

X-Vagus nerve; origin: medulla

XI-Spinal Accessory nerve; origin: medulla

XII-Hypoglossal nerve; origin: medulla

The nerves to originate in the pons are V, VI, VII, and VIII (the trigeminal, abducens, facial, and vestibulocochlear nerves).

6

Which cranial nerve is responsible for controlling the muscles that move the tongue?

Hypoglossal

Trochlear

Optic

Vestibulocochlear

Abducens

Explanation

Cranial nerve XII, the hypoglossal nerve, is responsible for controlling muscles that move the tongue. The vestibulocochlear nerve is responsible for sound and balance. The abducens and trochlear are responsible for controlling extraocular muscles. The optic nerve conveys information from the photoreceptor cells of the retina of the eye.

7

Which cranial nerve is involved with vision?

Optic nerve

Oculomotor nerve

Trochlear nerve

Abducens nerve

Explanation

Though all of these nerves are involved with the eye, only one of them is involved with vision. The optic nerve (cranial nerve II) has a sensory function, allowing us to see. The oculomotor nerve (cranial nerve III) has a motor function, allowing eyelid and eyeball movement. The trochlear nerve (cranial nerve IV) also has a motor function, allowing the eye to turn downward and laterally. Lastly, the abducens nerve (cranial nerve VI) also has a motor function, allowing the eye to turn laterally.

8

Which cranial nerve(s) supply taste sensation to the tongue?

VII and IX

VII only

IX only

VII and X

IX and X

Explanation

Cranial nerves VII and IX supply taste sensation to the tongue. Cranal nerve VII (facial) supplies taste to the anterior two-thirds of the tongue and cranial nerve IX (glossopharyngeal) supplies somatosensation and taste to the posterior one-third of the tongue.

9

The maxillary branch of cranial nerve V (trigeminal) has all of the following branches except __________.

auriculotemporal

zygomaticofacial

zygomaticotemporal

infraorbital

All of these are branches of the maxillary branch of the trigeminal nerve.

Explanation

Cranial nerve V (trigeminal) has 3 branches: ophthalmic, maxillary, and mandibular. Each of these branches have their own branches. The maxillary branch has 3 sub-branches named zygomaticofacial, zygomaticotemporal, and infraorbital. The mandibular branch has 3 sub-branches named auriculotemporal, buccal, and mental. The ophthamic branch has 5 sub-branches named supraorbital, supratrochlear, infraorbital, lacrimal, and external nasal.

10

Which cranial nerves carry parasympathetic fibers?

Select the most complete list.

Trigeminal, facial, glossopharyngeal, vagus

Optic, trigeminal, facial, vagus

Facial, vagus, hypoglossal

Trigeminal, facial, vagus

Ophthalmic, glossopharyngeal, vagus, hypoglossal

Explanation

The parasympathetic nervous system is responsible for the "rest and digest" mechanism. When the body is at rest the following occurs: pupils constrict (ophthalmic branch of the trigeminal nerve), lacrimation and salivation occur (facial nerve and glossopharyngeal nerve), heart rate decreases, respiration rate decreases, and digestion increases (vagus nerve).

In addition to the cranial nerves, sacral nerves 2-4 (pelvic splanchnic nerves) carry parasympathic fibers that control erections, the bladder, and the bowels.

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