What is the name of disease and what lobe controls this action in Micrographia?
Parkinson's disease
Parietal
Has no C-Peptide
What is T1DM
Supplies Temporalis, Masseter, Lateral pterygoid, Medial pterygoid.
What is CN V3?
How to test CN I as part of CN exam and its name?
We don't
Olfactory nerve
Inhibit sodium-glucose co-transporter 2, reducing glucose reabsorption in the kidney (and increasing its excretion in the urine). (Class and example)
Sodium-Glucose co-transporter 2 inhibitors
Empagliflozin, Dapagliflozin, Ertugliflozin
Travels through the wall of the Cavernous Sinus
Bonus points what goes through the Sinus
What is Oculomotor (CN III), Trochlear (CN IV), Maxillary division (CN V2), Ophthalmic (CN V1)
Internal Carotid artery, Abducens (CN VI)
Symptoms of Ptosis, Eye turned down and out, dilated non-reactive pupil, unreactive to accommodation, opposite pupil reacts normally - also act it out for bonus points
What is CN III Palsy
Bimodal peak onset age 5-7 and puberty
What is T1DM?
Innervates Sternocleidomastoid and Trapezius muscles (also demonstrate how to test)
What is Accessory nerve?
Fasciculation Present
Tone Decreased
Power Decreased
Tendon Reflexes Absent/decreased
Babinski Down: normal
What is LMN lesion
Deep and labored breathing pattern (act it out for bonus points)
What is Kussmaul’s breathing?
Innervates lacrimal gland, mucosal glands of upper nasal cavity and has a special sensory role (point out where this is on someone else) *Be specific with answer*
Nervus Intermedius (joins with CN VII Facial)