Interactive Transcript
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Dr. P here talking about the 9th cranial
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glossopharyngeal nerve.
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I want you to remember three components as we talk about
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the real origin in the medulla oblongata
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of the glossopharyngeal nerve,
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and they are the nucleus ambiguus,
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the inferior salivary nucleus, and the solitary tract nucleus.
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So, let's see where we are.
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We're at the level of the restiform body.
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Just for giggles, let's mark something we all know.
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We'll mark it in red.
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It's a motor pathway,
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just to get the motor pathway set.
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And this is known as the pyramid.
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And then we have the anterior midline sulcus
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between the two pyramids.
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So now we've got a couple of other,
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what I call motor pathways,
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that participate in the motor supply
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of the glossopharyngeal nerve.
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First, we've got the nucleus ambiguus,
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which is kind of right off the midline,
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a little bit behind center.
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Then we've got,
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and I've drawn it a little bigger
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than it really is, just so you can see it.
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Then you've got more posteriorly,
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just under the fourth ventricle,
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the nucleus of the solitary tract.
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That's also going to give rise to some motor function.
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And now let's switch over to some other color
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that represents a sensory contribution,
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which is the nucleus of the solitary tract,
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which sits just lateral to the inferior salivary nucleus.
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And now we have it.
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So now if we draw the apparent origin,
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we've got the sensory,
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and then we've got the contribution
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of the motor right here.
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These two give rise to the motor component
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of the trigeminal...
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sorry,
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of the glossopharyngeal as they come out.
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And they sort of travel together as one.
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You really can't separate them out.
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I've just separated them out anatomically for
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your perusal and educational interest.
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Now, the motor fibers arise in the medulla oblongata
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at the upper part of the nucleus ambiguus,
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which, by the way,
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receives central fibers from the precentral gyrus
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via the corticonuclear tract.
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They begin their course in the back,
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medially and down toward the floor
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of the fourth ventricle.
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But they swerve pretty sharply to the side
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before merging with the sensory roots.
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And you can see that sharp lateral swerve.
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And then the sensory root comes together with the motor
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root to produce the glossopharyngeal nerve,
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the real origin of the glossopharyngeal nerve,
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sensory and motor at the medulla oblongata,
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remembering the three major components:
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nucleus ambiguous, inferior salivary nucleus,
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nucleus of the solitary tract.
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Dr. P out.
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