Interactive Transcript
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I want to give you some tricks to isolate the
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fourth nerve and the fourth nerve nucleus.
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If you find the aqueduct of Sylvius
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in the inferior midbrain,
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you go forward 7 mm and over 5 mm
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along the inner edge of this dark line,
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the posterior longitudinal fasciculus.
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You are going to run into the trochlear nucleus on
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the left and then there's a paired
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one on the opposite side.
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Now, the trochlear nerve is going to come back and
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arc around the periaqueductal gray
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and it's going to decussate,
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not going to show the decussation because I want
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you to see the decussated trochlear nerves right there.
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So, another trick to finding the nerve
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is finding the inferior colliculus.
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There's the inferior colliculus.
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There is the frenulum of the superior
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medullary velum right there.
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And I'm going to scroll a little bit now and take
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my lines away and do some scrolling for you.
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There's the frenulum of the superomedullary
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velum and right there is the
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inferior colliculus.
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And there is the trochlear nerve.
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You're seeing some wispy spidery structures here,
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but the one that is most round right
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there is the trochlear nerve itself.
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Now, another trick is to find the third nerve.
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So let's cross-reference the third nerve in
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the interpeduncular cistern right there.
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There's your third nerve on the patient's right.
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There's the third nerve on the left.
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Now, let's keep going forward.
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There's the third nerve. Keep following it.
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Keep following.
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We're not able to see the fourth nerve.
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Keep going, keep going.
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The nerve is now entering the oculomotor sulcus.
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The nerve has now entered the cavernous sinus.
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There's the carotid artery.
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And what's the first thing below it?
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This little gray structure right there.
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I'm going to put a dot on top of it.
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That is the fourth nerve right there.
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What types of pathology affect the fourth nerve?
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Well, the fourth nerve supplies the superior
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oblique muscle of the eyeball.
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So,
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one of the syndromes that affects the superior
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oblique muscle is Brown's syndrome,
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which is a contraction or scar of the pulley of
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the superior oblique muscle.
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That can actually compress and encase the fourth nerve
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and contribute to cranial nerve encroachment
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on that nerve, and what's known as Brown's syndrome
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or the fibrotic syndrome of the superior oblique pulley.
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Let's move on, shall we?
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