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Training Collections
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Black Friday Save 30%On-demand course library with video lectures, expert case reviews, and more
Fellowship Certificate™ Programs
Black Friday Save 30%Practice-focused training programs designed to help you gain experience in a specific subspecialty area.
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Black Friday Save 40%Unlock access to our full Course Library and all self-paced Fellowships.
Noon Conference (Free)
Get access to free live lectures, every week, from top radiologists.
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Get a free weekly case delivered right to your inbox.
Dr. Resnick's MSK Conference
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19 topics, 41 min.
Introduction to Gross Anatomy of the Brain
4 m.Frontal Lobar Anatomy
5 m.Sylvian Fissure
3 m.Middle Frontal Gyrus
2 m.Inferior Parietal Lobule
2 m.Central Sulcus of Rolando
3 m.Intraparietal Sulcus
2 m.Localizing the Intraparietal Lobule Part 2
2 m.Localizing the Intraparietal Lobule Part 3
2 m.Pars Marginalis
2 m.Parieto-occipital Sulcus
2 m.Pars Marginalis on Axial Imaging
3 m.Midline Sagittal Commissures
2 m.Basic Brainstem Anatomy
2 m.Midline Cerebellum (Vermis)
3 m.Midline Cisterns and Spaces
2 m.Midline Sagittal Blood Supplies
4 m.Midline Skeletal Anatomy
3 m.Miscellaneous Midline Structures
3 m.52 topics, 2 hr. 14 min.
The Olfactory Nerve – Cranial Nerve I
4 m.The Olfactory Bulb
5 m.The Olfactory Tracts
5 m.The Optic Nerve – Cranial Nerve II
3 m.The Globe and Optic Pathway
5 m.Chiasm & Retrochiasmatic Pathway
3 m.Destinations of Optic Nerve Signals
3 m.The Oculomotor Nerve – Cranial Nerve III
4 m.Oculomotor Nerve: Course, Adjacent Structures & Destination
4 m.Oculomotor Nerve: Nuclei and Intramedullary Course
3 m.Third Nerve Syndromes
5 m.The Trochlear Nerve - Cranial Nerve IV
3 m.Trochlear Nerve: Course and Pathologies
3 m.The Trigeminal Nerve – Cranial Nerve V
3 m.Trigeminal Nerve Synapses in the Brainstem
6 m.Nuclear Anatomy and Position of the Trigeminal System
4 m.Parasympathetic Ganglia Anatomy of the Head and Neck
2 m.MRI anatomy of the Submandibular Ganglion
4 m.MRI Anatomy of the Pterygopalatine Ganglion
3 m.Trigeminal Nerve - V1 Division
2 m.Trigeminal Nerve - V2 Division
2 m.Trigeminal Nerve - V3 Division
3 m.The Abducens Nerve – Cranial Nerve VI
3 m.Cranial Nerves 1-6: Review
3 m.Abducens Nerve Nucleus and Nerve
4 m.Identifying the Cisternal Abducens Nerve
3 m.The Facial Nerve: Nucleus and Intramedullary Course
3 m.The Facial Nerve – Cranial Nerve VII
2 m.Facial Nerve: Medullary, Cisternal, and Canalicular Segments
3 m.Seventh Nerve Segments on MRI
5 m.Facial Nerve: Motor, Sensory, and Parasympathetic Branches
2 m.Proximal Branches of the Facial Nerve
3 m.Distal Branches of the Facial Nerve
2 m.The Posterior Auricular Nerve
2 m.The Greater Petrosal Nerve
2 m.The Vestibulocochlear Nerve – Cranial Nerve VIII
4 m.Cranial Nerves 7 & 8: Cisternal Course at the CPA
2 m.Vestibulocochlear Nerve: Cochlea and Internal Auditory Canal
2 m.Glossopharyngeal Nerve – Cranial Nerve IX
2 m.Glossopharyngeal Nerve Course
2 m.Exit of the Glossopharyngeal Nerve
2 m.Nuclei of the Glossopharyngeal Nerve
3 m.Glossopharyngeal Nerve Summary
2 m.The Vagus Nerve – Cranial Nerve X
2 m.Nuclei of the Vagus Nerve
2 m.The Innervations of the Vagus Nerve
4 m.Function of Vagal Nuclei
3 m.Accessory Nerve – Cranial Nerve XI
2 m.Accessory Nerve Summary
3 m.The Hypoglossal Nerve – Cranial Nerve XII
3 m.The Descent of the Hypoglossal Nerve
2 m.The Real Origin of the Hypoglossal Nerve
2 m.0:00
Dr. P here talking about the hypoglossal nerve,
0:03
as you saw in the last vignette.
0:05
This nerve will penetrate the lateral mass of
0:08
the occipital bone as the hypoglossal canal.
0:10
To see the canal,
0:11
you have to go down and a little bit lateral,
0:14
which we'll do in a minute.
0:14
There's the hypoglossal nerve.
0:16
But I want to clarify one thing.
0:18
There's a little bump right here which is actually
0:20
the pyramidal bump. And behind that,
0:23
if we scroll a little bit up and down,
0:25
you can see a second little bump.
0:26
There's your second little bump, the olive.
0:30
So this is going to be a preolivary position of the
0:33
hypoglossal nerve, whereas nine and ten are
0:36
going to have more of a postolivary,
0:38
more posterior position as you saw on earlier vignettes.
0:42
Then as we scroll down,
0:43
we lose the nerve for a little bit.
0:45
Kind of gets buried and hidden by the pulsation
0:48
phenomenon and anatomy of the vertebral artery.
0:50
But there is our hypoglossal canal
0:52
with an anterolateral course.
0:54
We said there are multiple rootlets that converge into
0:57
one nerve, sometimes two nerves traveling together.
1:00
But no more than two trunks,
1:01
as what you see with the hypoglossal nerve.
1:04
Now, the hypoglossal nerve passes through
1:06
the subarachnoid space.
1:08
It passes the dura mater in the hypoglossal canal and in
1:12
the opening of the occipital bone, as we described.
1:14
But after emerging, it gives off a meningeal branch.
1:17
It picks up a branch from the anterior ramus of C1.
1:21
And you can start to see those branches
1:23
as we scroll downward right here.
1:26
Here are some of the branches down lower
1:28
of the upper cervical region, C1.
1:32
And then it travels close to the vagus nerve and spinal
1:34
division of the accessory nerve, spiraling downward behind
1:38
the vagus nerve and passes between the internal carotid
1:42
artery and the internal jugular vein,
1:44
lying on the carotid sheath.
1:46
So, it's going to sit as you would expect because
1:49
twelve comes after ten and eleven.
1:51
It's going to sit behind the vagus nerve as it descends.
1:56
Dr. P out.
Interactive Transcript
0:00
Dr. P here talking about the hypoglossal nerve,
0:03
as you saw in the last vignette.
0:05
This nerve will penetrate the lateral mass of
0:08
the occipital bone as the hypoglossal canal.
0:10
To see the canal,
0:11
you have to go down and a little bit lateral,
0:14
which we'll do in a minute.
0:14
There's the hypoglossal nerve.
0:16
But I want to clarify one thing.
0:18
There's a little bump right here which is actually
0:20
the pyramidal bump. And behind that,
0:23
if we scroll a little bit up and down,
0:25
you can see a second little bump.
0:26
There's your second little bump, the olive.
0:30
So this is going to be a preolivary position of the
0:33
hypoglossal nerve, whereas nine and ten are
0:36
going to have more of a postolivary,
0:38
more posterior position as you saw on earlier vignettes.
0:42
Then as we scroll down,
0:43
we lose the nerve for a little bit.
0:45
Kind of gets buried and hidden by the pulsation
0:48
phenomenon and anatomy of the vertebral artery.
0:50
But there is our hypoglossal canal
0:52
with an anterolateral course.
0:54
We said there are multiple rootlets that converge into
0:57
one nerve, sometimes two nerves traveling together.
1:00
But no more than two trunks,
1:01
as what you see with the hypoglossal nerve.
1:04
Now, the hypoglossal nerve passes through
1:06
the subarachnoid space.
1:08
It passes the dura mater in the hypoglossal canal and in
1:12
the opening of the occipital bone, as we described.
1:14
But after emerging, it gives off a meningeal branch.
1:17
It picks up a branch from the anterior ramus of C1.
1:21
And you can start to see those branches
1:23
as we scroll downward right here.
1:26
Here are some of the branches down lower
1:28
of the upper cervical region, C1.
1:32
And then it travels close to the vagus nerve and spinal
1:34
division of the accessory nerve, spiraling downward behind
1:38
the vagus nerve and passes between the internal carotid
1:42
artery and the internal jugular vein,
1:44
lying on the carotid sheath.
1:46
So, it's going to sit as you would expect because
1:49
twelve comes after ten and eleven.
1:51
It's going to sit behind the vagus nerve as it descends.
1:56
Dr. P out.
Report
Description
Faculty
Stephen J Pomeranz, MD
Chief Medical Officer, ProScan Imaging. Founder, MRI Online
ProScan Imaging
Tags
Oral Cavity/Oropharynx
Neuroradiology
MRI
Head and Neck
Carotid Space
Brain
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