Term
What Artery supplies the Bladder? |
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Definition
Vesicular branches of the internal iliac artery |
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Term
What landmark do you use to determine an indirect inguinal hernia vs direct? |
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Definition
Inferior epigastric. Branch of external iliac. Indirect inguinals are lateral and direct hernias are medial. MDs don't LIe. |
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Term
What artery gives rise to internal pudendal and what arteries branch from it. |
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Definition
Anyerior dicision of Internal iliac. Then inferior rectal, perineal, artery of bulb in men, urethral artery, deep artery of penis or clitoris and dorsal artery of penis or clitoris. |
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Term
What artery gives rise to lateral sacral? |
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Definition
Posterior division of internal iliac. |
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Term
What artery supples the greater curvature of stomach near pelorus? |
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Definition
Right gastroepiploic. A branch of gastrodiodenal. Left gastric off celiac trunk supplies left lesser curvature. |
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Term
What artsy does he left gastroepiploic artery come from? |
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Definition
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Term
What artery supplies he lesser curvature of stomach on right side? |
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Definition
Right gastric, a branch of hepatic artery proper. |
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Term
If someone has a right homonymous hemianopia w macular sparing where is the lesion and what artery supplies that area? |
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Definition
Calcarine cortex. Supplied by posterior cerebral artery to o cipital lobe. |
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Term
What defects result from hemisection of the spinal cord? |
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Definition
Brown-adequate syndrome. Ipsateral heliparesis (loss of corticospnal), loss of discriminatory touch (dorsal columns) and contraleteral loss of pain and temp (spinothalamic). |
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Term
What sensation is in lateral fununculus? |
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Definition
Pain and temp via spinothalamic and motor function via corticospinal |
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Term
What is the sequence of oogenesis |
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Definition
Primordial follicle containing primary oocytes arrested in prophase 1 -> primary follicle -> secondary follicle ->graafian follicle. Primary follicles are relatively small w a central procure and surrounding layers of cuboidal cells. Small spaces form then fuse together to create a larger space or antrum. This is a secondary follicle. |
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Term
What sensation is in lateral fununculus? |
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Definition
Pain and temp via spinothalamic and motor function via corticospinal |
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Term
What is the cause of meckels diverticulum? |
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Definition
Persistence of vitelline omphslomesenteric duct. Rule of 2s: 2 percent of children, 2 feet from iliocecal valve, 2 types of ectopic mucosa and symptoms occur by age 2. Symptoms are gI pain, bleeding, ulceration. |
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Term
Which muscle holds down scapula when arm is raised and what nerve controls it? |
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Definition
Serrated anterior. Long thoracic nerve which runs superficially in superolateral thoracic wall |
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Term
What muscle elevates the scapula? |
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Definition
Levator scapulae. it's innervation is from the cervical plexus C-3 and C-4 |
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Term
Where is pectoralis minor attached to on the scapula? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the function of the rhomboid major |
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Definition
Rhomboid major primarily retracts the scapula. |
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Term
What nerve innervates the rhomboid major |
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Definition
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Term
What is the function of supraspinatus |
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Definition
It initiates arm abduction, the first 20 to 30°, before there is significant rotation of the scapula |
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Term
If the hepatic portal vein were blocked how could blood get back into the cabal system |
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Definition
The left gastric vein communicates with esophageal venous plexus which drains into a zygotes and hemiazygos veins to svc |
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Term
Superior rectal vein is to the ? As the paraumbical veins w ? |
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Definition
Portocaval connections: left gastric to esophageal veins which go into azygos. Superior rectal veins with middle and inferior rectal veins. Para umbilical veins with epigastric veins (capture medusas) colic and splenic veins with renal veins |
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Term
A patient has ataxia, slurred speech, intention tremor, hypotonia and nystagmus. Where is the lesion and what is the embryonic brain structure |
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Definition
Cerebellum: drunk gait, intention tremor, dysdiadochokinesia, dysmetria (inability to stop movements at desired point), dysarthria ( ataxic speech) hypotonia and nystagmus. Cerebellum and pons are from metencephalon. |
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Term
Describe the embryonic brain structures |
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Definition
4th week: anterior neural tube develops 3 structures. Prosencephalon (forebrain) mesencephalon (midbrain) rhombencephalon (hindbrain). By sixth week, five vesicles: prosencephalon is now telencephalon and diencephalon, everything w word thalamus as well as post pit and neural retina). Mesencephalon. Rhombencephalon becomes 2: Metencephalon (pons and cerebellum) and myencephalon ( medulla) |
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Term
Low pitched rumbling diastolic murmur. Opening snap. Rheumatic fever. |
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Definition
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Term
From what embryonic structure are the optic cups derived |
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Definition
Optic cups come from optic vesicles which are evaginations of diencephalon |
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Term
What embryonic structure gives rise to the neural and pigment layers of retina? |
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Definition
Optic cup. The optic cups are from optic vesicles which are from the diencephalon. |
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Term
After what event is the optic stalk then called the optic nerve |
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Definition
Closure of choroid fissure in optic stalk during seventh week. |
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Term
From what embryonic germ layer is the sclera and choroid of the I derived? |
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Definition
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Term
Where is the locus ceruleus and what does it contain? |
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Definition
Dense collection of neuromelanin containing cells in rostral pons near lateral edge of fourth ventricle. It contains norepinephrine provinding majority of noradrenergic inner action to forebrain |
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Term
What is the basal nucleus of meynert? |
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Definition
A part of substantia innominata, a major collection of forebrain cholinergic neurons that inner ate neocortex, hippocampal formation and amygdala. The basal nucleus degenerates in Alzheimer's. |
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Term
What type of neurons degenerate in Huntington's disease and what nucleus are they in |
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Definition
GABAergic neurons. Caudate nucleus GABAergic neurons project to globus pallidus and substantia nigra pars reticulata. Degeneration leads to enlarged lateral ventricles on MRI |
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Term
What neurotransmitter is in the Raphael nuclei |
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Definition
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Term
What's the difference between substantia nigra pars reticulata and pars compacta? |
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Definition
SNPC contains nigrostriatal neurons, a source of dopamine. They degenerate in Parkinson's and w MPTP. SNPR is GABAergic neurons that inner ate the thalamus. |
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Term
What is the ventral tegemental area? |
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Definition
In midbrain. Source of DA for limbic and cortical areas. Over activity is theory behind schitzophrenia |
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Term
What is a surgeon testing for when he taps the muscles of mastication esp the masseter following thyroid sx? |
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Definition
Strong jerk of masseter is evidence of tetany from hypocalcemia due to innturruption of blood supply to the parathyroid. East superior and inferior thyroid arteries supply the parathyroid glands |
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Term
What vessels are in the portal triad |
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Definition
Hepatic artery, common bile duct and portal vein. These structures constitute the porta hepatis and lie at free edge of lesser omentum as it forms epiploic foramen. |
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Term
Is the hepatic vein in the portal triad |
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Definition
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Term
What nerve roots are in the long thoracic nerve |
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Definition
C5 C6 C7 winged scapula=long thoracic nerve injury. Serratus anterior stabilizes scapula from 90 to 180 degrees. |
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Term
What is the function of the supraspinatus muscle |
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Definition
Abducting the arm from 0° to 30°. The rest of the motion to 180 is performed by the deltoid which is innervated by the axillary nerve. But motion from 90° to 180° requires a stable scapula. serratus anterior does that |
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Term
What nerve roots are in the axillary nerve and what does it do |
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Definition
C-5 and C-6. A branch of posterior cord of brachial plexus. A poorly placed crutch can damage this nerve causing paralysis of teres minor and deltoid. arm abduction is impaired and there is loss of sensation over lower half of deltoid |
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Term
What nerve innervates teres major |
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Definition
Lower subscapular nerve. Teres major is responsible for adducting and medially rotating the arm |
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Term
What nerve root supply the subscapular nerve |
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Definition
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Term
What nerve innervates the supraspinatus and infraspinatus? What is the role of these muscles |
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Definition
Suprascapular nerve. Supraspinatus and infraspinatus do abduction and lateral rotation |
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Term
What nerve roots are in the suprascapular nerve |
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Definition
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Term
What is the function of the latissimus dorsi |
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Definition
Adduction and extension of arm |
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Term
Any wound beneath what intercostal space can damage the liver |
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Definition
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Term
What 2 intercostal spaces define the boundary of right atrium |
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Definition
Third costal cartilage to sixth costal cartilage just right of sternum |
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Term
Svc enters right atrium at the level of ? costal cartilage |
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Definition
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Term
The urethral folds become what in female embryo versus male? |
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Definition
Labia minora and ventral surface of penis. Failure to fuse results in hypospadia in male, a ventral hole. |
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Term
The labia majora and scrotum develop from the ? aka labioscrotal folds. |
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Definition
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Term
In the female the caudal genital ligament becomes 2 structures: |
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Definition
Ovarian ligament and round ligament of uterus. In male it becomes gubernaculum |
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Term
What nerve supplies the posterior compartment and what are the muscles? |
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Definition
Tibial nerve. Tibialis posterior, FDL, gastrocnemius and soleus. |
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Term
How many bones are in coccyx |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
What artery supplies the right ventricle and in most people the av node, posterior and inferior left ventricle? |
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Definition
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Term
Someone is in an MVA. Slight dropping of left eyelid. Left constricted people. Left sided facial swelling. No other deficits. Where is the lesion? |
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Definition
Preganglionic sympathetic fibers come from t1 to t5 and travel to superior cervical ganglion. |
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Term
What are the tracheoesophageal ridges |
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Definition
To longitudinal ridges that separate the respiratory diverticulum from the foregut. Eventually they fuse to form a septum separating the esophagus from the trachea and lung buds ventrally. |
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Term
What is the most medial carpal bone of the proximal row |
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Definition
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Term
What symptoms characterize trigeminal neuralgia |
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Definition
Extreme pain along the distributions of the maxillary and mandibular subdivisions of cranial nerve five |
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Term
Which pharyngeal arch is innervated by the trigeminal nerve |
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Definition
The first branchial/pharyngeal arch. |
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Term
What nerve innervates the second pharyngeal arch? |
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Definition
Cranial nerve 7. Muscles of facial expression |
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Term
What nerve innervates the third pharyngeal arch |
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Definition
Cranial nerve nine glossopharyngeal it innervates the Stylopharyngeus muscle |
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Term
What nerve innervates the fourth pharyngeal arch |
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Definition
CN 10 vagus. Pharyngeal constrictors. |
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Term
When is embryonic tissue most susceptible to teratogens? |
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Definition
Third through ninth week of pregnancy. Major congenital defects occur in this period of organogenesis. The first two weeks are not generally associated with Teratogenicity. |
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Term
An infant is born with an abnormally developed falciform ligament. The hepatogastric and hepatoduodenal ligaments Are also malformed. These developmental anomalies are Most likely Due to abnormal development of the: dorsal mesoduodenum, dorsal mesogastrium, pericardioperitoneal canal, pleuropericardial membranes or ventral mesentery? |
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Definition
Ventral mesentery. It forms the falciform ligament and lesser omentum which can be divided into the hepatogastric and hepatoduodenal ligaments. |
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Term
Are the pancreas and Duodenum in the peritoneal cavity? |
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Definition
No they are retroperitoneal |
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Term
How does a Thyroglossal duct cyst present and what is it? |
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Definition
The thyroglossal duct connects the foremen cecum at tongue base to the thyroid prenatally. It usually degenerates. If not it turns into a cyst seen as a mass midline on neck. Pathognomonic is a mass that elevates when tongue protrudes |
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Term
What nerve does the lingual nerve branch from? What sensation is carried in it? |
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Definition
Lingual nerve is a branch of the mandibular division of cn v. It carries sensation to the anterior two thirds of the tongue. It passes under the mandibular third molar. Between the medial pterygoid muscle and mandibular ramus |
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Term
In maxillary sinusitis, how does fluid drained into the middle meatus? |
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Definition
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Term
The superior nasal meat us is located above the superior nasal concha and contains an opening for what |
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Definition
Posterior ethmoidal air cells |
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Term
What nerve conveys sensory information to most of the dorsal aspect of the foot |
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Definition
Superficial peroneal nerve |
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Term
What nerve innervates the hamstrings as well as muscles of the calf and sole of foot |
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Definition
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Term
Where is the auriculotemporal nerve? |
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Definition
A branch of v3 that passes from infra temporal fossa to parotid region. Conveys sensory from region in front of ear and tmj and conveys postganglionic parasympathetic to parotid salivary gland. |
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Term
Where is the auriculotemporal nerve? |
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Definition
A branch of v3 that passes from infra temporal fossa to parotid region. Conveys sensory from region in front of ear and tmj and conveys postganglionic parasympathetic to parotid salivary gland. |
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