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CN 7
CBN II
36
Medical
Graduate
01/22/2011

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Cards

Term
what are the 4 functions of the facial nerve?
Definition
autonomic efferent (chordae tympani - stimulates saliva glands), autonomic afferent (chordae tympani - taste to ant 2/3 toungue, greater petrosal nerve - helps create tears), sensorimotor afferent (sensory nerve to external canal), sensorimotor efferent (peripheral branches of facial expression)
Term
what is the pathway of the facial nerve to the facial nuclei from the cortex?
Definition
the cortical projections originate in the precentral gyrus and most cross in the caudal pons to reach the facial nucleus (if pt can raise one eyebrow w/o raising the other, theirs prob don't cross and their forehead is more vulnerable to denervation if the innervation from one tract goes out).
Term
what are the afferents to the facial nucleus?
Definition
thalamic nucleus: facial expression, trigeminal nucleus: corneal reflex, acoustic nuclei: stapedial reflex, and visual system: blink reflex
Term
what is the pathway of the facial nerve from the facial nuclei to the terminal branches?
Definition
from the lower border of the pons to the internal auditory meatus (along w/CN 8), through the temporal bone, through the stylomastoid foramen (exits skull), and to the terminal branches.
Term
what is the first branch off CN7 as it passes the internal auditory meatus?
Definition
the greater superficial petrosal branch (stimulates lacrimal gland = tearing) which goes to the geniculate ganglion
Term
what does the stapedial (2nd) branch off CN 7 do?
Definition
stimulates the stapedial tendon - protects the ear from loud sounds.
Term
what is the branch of CN 7 which stimulates the salivary glands (3rd branch)? what else does this branch do?
Definition
chordae tympani, which also carries taste from the anterior 2/3 of the tongue. located almost between the ossicular chain and out the main trunk.
Term
what is the CN 7 branch when it comes out the main trunk (4th branch)?
Definition
the posterior auricular branch - sensory to the auricle and external auditory canal
Term
what are the CN 7 branches of facial expression in order?
Definition
temporal, zygomatic, buccal, mandibular, and cervical
Term
what is the relationship between the facial nerve and CN7?
Definition
CN 7 defines the two lobes of the parotid gland – doesn't have a fibrous capsule to encapsulate superficial and deep lobes. usually here there are 2 main branches of CN7: temporozygomatic and cervicofacial
Term
what are the different tests which line up w/locations along the pathway of CN7?
Definition
neurologic exam: supranuclear, nuclear, infranuclear cerebello-pontine angle. eng/audiologic/x-ray: internal auditory canal. tear test: geniculate ganglion. salivation/taste/stapedial reflex: tympanomastoid. facial movement: extra cranially
Term
what is neurapraxia?
Definition
transient episode of nerve damage w/no disruption of the nerve/nerve sheath (bruise)
Term
what is axonotmesis?
Definition
disruption of the neuronal axon, but maintenance of the myelin sheath (sprain)
Term
what is neurotmesis?
Definition
the nerve and nerve sheath are disrupted (break)
Term
what is wallerian degeneration?
Definition
the nerve is cut/crushed and the distal axon skeleton disintegrates/axon membrane breaks apart (24 hrs). a neurolemma remains and the proximal axon grows at 1 mm/day (96 hrs). (how a nerve grows back)
Term
what is the best way of testing for nerve damage?
Definition
EMG (but may take 10-14 days to appear) or the facial nerve stimulator test. nerve excitability, conduction latency, strength-duration curve are also possible tests.
Term
what are the idiopathic causes of CN 7 paralysis?
Definition
bell's palsy (dx of exclusion/*most common*) and melkerson-rosenthal syndrome
Term
what are the traumatic causes of CN 7 paralysis?
Definition
surgical trauma (ear/parotid/neck sx - commonly affects the marginal mandibular nerve - more common), temporal bone fracture, and facial trauma.
Term
what are the infectious causes of CN 7 paralysis?
Definition
herpes zoster oticus (vesicular, streaking rash), acute/chronic suppurative otitis media, malignant otitis externa, other (lyme, syphilis, meningitis, rubella, mononucleosis, other viruses)
Term
what are the neoplastic causes of CN 7 paralysis?
Definition
neuroma, meningioma, and central CNS/parotid malignancy
Term
what is the schirmer nerve test?
Definition
filter paper is applied to the lower lids to compare tear production over fixed time - tests the greater superficial petrosal nerve
Term
how is the stapedial nerve tested?
Definition
the stapedial acoustic reflex test, which can be tested via response recorded on a pressure meter to sound
Term
how is the chordae tympani tested?
Definition
1) salivary flow test (cannulate wharton's ducts to collect saliva production over a fixed time). 2) electrogustometry: measure the amount of electricity needed to stimulate toungue sensation comparing sides.
Term
how is facial expression tested?
Definition
evaluate the voluntary movements of each peripheral branch: *eyebrow movement (raise eyebrow, if no corrugation), eye closure (**3rd CN opens eyes, 7th closes**), buccal function (purse lips, smile big, hold lip down [marginal mandibular nerve]), corneal reflex (cotton tip to sclera, should blink automatically), audiogram/electronystagmography (ENG - eval other nerves in the internal auditory canal), and a complete central neurologic exam
Term
what does it mean if a pt can corrugate their eyebrows, blink, laugh w/full smile, but can't close eye?
Definition
it's a central (cortical) problem vs a peripheral one
Term
how would a pt w/a C7 supranuclear lesions present?
Definition
the pt would have a spontaneous smile w/good tone and intact upper facial expression - but other neurologic deficits. dx: CVA, trauma
Term
how would a pt w/C6-7 nuclear lesions present?
Definition
the pt would have involvement of the 6th+7th CN and corticospinal tracts. dx: vascular, neoplastic, polio, MS, and encephalitis
Term
how would a pt w/a C7 lesion at the level of the pontine angle present?
Definition
involvement of the vestibular and cochlear portions of CN 8, in terms of CN7, taste/lacrimation/salivation are esp affected. later, CN5,9,10,11 may be also affected. dx: neuroma, hyperacusis, meningioma, fracture, cholesteatoma, arachnoid cyst (imaging).
Term
how would a pt w/a C7 lesion at the level of the geniculate ganglion present?
Definition
facial paralysis, hyperacusis, alteration of lacrimation, salivation and taste. dx: herpes zoster oticus, fracture, bell's palsy, cholesteatoma, neuroma, AVM, and meningoma.
Term
how would a pt w/a C7 lesion at the level of the tympanomastoid present?
Definition
facial paralysis, alteration in salivation and taste - but lacrimation is intact (distal to supra petrosal nerve). dx: bell's palsy, cholesteatoma, fracture, infection.
Term
how would a pt w/a C7 lesion at the extracranial level present?
Definition
facial paralysis (usually a branch is spared), intact salivation/taste and deviation of the jaw to the normal side. dx: trauma, tumor, parotid CA, and pharyngeal CA.
Term
what is tx for CN 7 paralysis if identified as bell's palsy?
Definition
steroids and acyclovir
Term
what is tx for CN 7 paralysis if identified as nerve injury?
Definition
nerve reanastomosis
Term
what is tx for CN 7 paralysis if identified as due to otitis?
Definition
myringotomy (aspirate through tympanic membrane), mastoidectomy, nerve decompression. if herpes zoster oticus: steroids.
Term
how do bell's palsy pts usually present?
Definition
insidious/sudden onset: "went to bed, felt fine but left the window open, woke up and face didn’t move (thought having a stroke)"
Term
in tx of CN 7 lesions, how are complications of paralysis avoided?
Definition
eye: early - tape eye shut at night and use artificial tears during the day, late - gold weights to upper lids and physical therapy for facial muscles (protects against corneal keratitis). muscle atrophy: stretch/exercise facial muscles, physical therapy. reconstruction: nerve grafting, cross face graft, and fascia sling.
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