enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Tympanic nerve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tympanic_nerve

    The tympanic nerve may be involved by paraganglioma, in this location referred to as a glomus tympanicum tumour. [5] This causes a soft mass in the middle ear (tympanic cavity). [5] There may also be pulsatile tinnitus, hearing loss or hearing problems, and some cardiac abnormalities. [5]

  3. Chorda tympani - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chorda_tympani

    The chorda tympani nerve carries its information to the nucleus of solitary tract, and shares this area with the greater petrosal, glossopharyngeal, and vagus nerves. [8] When the greater petrosal and glossopharyngeal nerves are cut, regardless of age, the chorda tympani nerve takes over the space in the terminal field.

  4. Tympanic plexus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tympanic_plexus

    The tympanic plexus is a nerve plexus within the tympanic cavity formed upon the promontory of tympanic cavity by the tympanic nerve (branch of the inferior ganglion of glossopharyngeal nerve (CN IX)), and the superior and inferior caroticotympanic nerves (post-ganglionic sympathetic branches of the internal carotid plexus).

  5. Tympanic cavity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tympanic_cavity

    The floor of the cavity (also called the jugular wall) is narrow, and consists of a thin plate of bone (fundus tympani) which separates the tympanic cavity from the jugular fossa. It presents, near the labyrinthic wall, a small aperture for the passage of the tympanic branch of the glossopharyngeal nerve.

  6. Eardrum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eardrum

    In the anatomy of humans and various other tetrapods, the eardrum, also called the tympanic membrane or myringa, is a thin, cone-shaped membrane that separates the external ear from the middle ear. Its function is to transmit changes in pressure of sound from the air to the ossicles inside the middle ear, and thence to the oval window in the ...

  7. Inferior ganglion of glossopharyngeal nerve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inferior_ganglion_of_gloss...

    The tympanic nerve is the first branch of the glossopharyngeal nerve. It branches at the level of the inferior ganglion. It branches at the level of the inferior ganglion. Importantly, the axons which form the tympanic nerve do not synapse in this ganglion or have their cell bodies in it.

  8. Superior ganglion of glossopharyngeal nerve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superior_ganglion_of_gloss...

    The axons of these neurons branch from the glossopharyngeal nerve at the level of the inferior ganglion and form the tympanic nerve along with the preganglionic parasympathetic axons from the inferior salivatory nucleus. The tympanic nerve then travels through the inferior tympanic canaliculus to the tympanic cavity forming the tympanic plexus ...

  9. Geniculate ganglion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geniculate_ganglion

    The course and connections of the facial nerve in the temporal bone. Cranial nerves VII and VIII and selected structures of the inner and middle ear. 1 Nervus vestibularis , 2 Nervus cochlearis , 3 Nervus intermediofacialis , 4 Ganglion geniculi , 5 Chorda tympani , 6 Cochlea , 7 Ductus semicirculares , 8 Malleus , 9 Membrana tympani , 10 Tuba ...