Interactive Transcript
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Dr. P here talking about the ganglia of the head and neck,
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the parasympathetics,
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their relationship to cranial nerve five.
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There are four of them: ciliary, pterygopalatine,
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submandibular, and otic.
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Remember, with a mnemonic COPS,
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C-O-P-S.
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We're down here at the floor of the mouth and
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working our way up. We've got some tongue.
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And then we get to the region of the palate:
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the hard and the soft palate.
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And this is the hard palate here.
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As soon as we get to the maxillary sinus,
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now we're looking for the optic nerve.
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So let's go there. It's an important landmark,
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the optic foramen.
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And now let's work our way back down from the optic
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foramen, where we get into the inferior
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orbital fissure right there.
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And the inferior orbital fissure is going to
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transition into the pterygomaxillary fissure,
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the pterygopalatine space.
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And in the upper third of this little fat-filled space
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right here, behind the maxillary sinus, as we've
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scrolled from up or craniad, the inferior orbital fissure
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to down, we've reached this important landmark
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where the pterygopalatine ganglion will live,
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also known as Meckel's ganglion,
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the nasal ganglion, and the sphenopalatine ganglion,
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lying in a little fossa or pocket known
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as the pterygopalatine fossa.
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Now, this ganglion has multiple functions.
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The greater petrosal nerve,
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a branch of the 7th, has an important role here,
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as does the maxillary nerve,
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which provides sensory supply to the lacrimal
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region and to the nasal cavity.
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The parasympathetics get there via the nervus
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intermedius, which is part of the 7th nerve.
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But in actuality,
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the supply comes down through the chorda tympani nerve,
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which you've learned in prior vignettes,
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runs in parallel with its traveling partner,
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the lingual nerve,
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which is a branch of cranial nerve five.
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So this is the location behind,
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more or less the upper border of the maxillary sinus.
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These two layers of fat represent bone marrow.
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This is the little fossa right here.
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The ganglion is located in this region.
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We can blow it up a little bit so you could see.
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It's a horizontal coursing space that then will exit
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anterosuperolateral into the inferior orbital fissure.
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And there are other important connections that
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we'll dive into more deeply in other vignettes.
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Dr. P out.
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