The
trigeminal nerve (the
fifth cranial nerve, also called the
fifth nerve, or simply
CNV or
CN5) is a nerve
responsible for sensation in the face and certain motor functions such
as biting, chewing, and swallowing. It is the largest of the cranial nerves.
Its name ("trigeminal" = tri- or three, and -geminus or twin, or thrice
twinned) derives from the fact that each trigeminal nerve, one on each
side of the pons, has three major branches: the ophthalmic nerve (V
1), the maxillary nerve (V
2), and the mandibular nerve (V
3). The ophthalmic and maxillary nerves are purely sensory. The mandibular nerve has both sensory and motor functions.
Sensory information from the face and body is processed by parallel
pathways in the central nervous system. The motor division of the
trigeminal nerve is derived from the basal plate of the embryonic pons, while the sensory division originates from the cranial neural crest.
Function
The sensory function of the trigeminal nerve is to provide the tactile, proprioceptive, and nociceptive afference of the face and mouth. The motor function activates the muscles of mastication, the tensor tympani, tensor veli palatini, mylohyoid, and anterior belly of the digastric.
Peripheral anatomy
Dermatome distribution of the
trigeminal nerve
The three major branches of the trigeminal nerve, the ophthalmic nerve (V
1), the maxillary nerve (V
2), and the mandibular nerve (V
3) converge on the trigeminal ganglion (also called the semilunar ganglion or gasserian ganglion), that is located within Meckel's cave, and contains the cell bodies of incoming sensory nerve fibers. The trigeminal ganglion is analogous to the dorsal root ganglia of the spinal cord, which contain the cell bodies of incoming sensory fibers from the rest of the body.
From the trigeminal ganglion, a single large sensory root enters the brainstem at the level of the pons. Immediately adjacent to the sensory root, a smaller motor root emerges from the pons at the same level.
Motor fibers pass through the trigeminal ganglion on their way to peripheral muscles, but their cell bodies are located in the
nucleus of the fifth nerve, deep within the pons.
The areas of cutaneous distribution (dermatomes)
of the three branches of the trigeminal nerve have sharp borders with
relatively little overlap (unlike dermatomes in the rest of the body,
which show considerable overlap). Injection of local anesthetics such as
lidocaine
results in the complete loss of sensation from well-defined areas of
the face and mouth. For example, the teeth on one side of the jaw can be
numbed by injecting the mandibular nerve. However, occasionally injury
or disease processes may affect two or all three branches of the
trigeminal nerve, and in these cases the involved branches may be
termed:
- V1/V2 distribution - referring to the ophthalmic and maxillary branches
- V2/V3 distribution - referring to the maxillary and mandibular branches
- V1-V3 distribution - referring to all three branches
It is also worth noting that nerves on the left side of the jaw
outnumber slightly the number of nerves on the right side of the jaw.
Trigeminal nerve at foetus
Sensory branches of the trigeminal nerve
Dermatome distribution of the trigeminal nerve
The ophthalmic, maxillary and mandibular branches leave the skull through three separate foramina: the superior orbital fissure, the foramen rotundum and the foramen ovale. The mnemonic
standing room only can be used to remember that V
1 passes through the
superior orbital fissure, V
2 through the foramen
rotundum, and V
3 through the foramen
ovale.
[1]
- The ophthalmic nerve (V1) carries sensory
information from the scalp and forehead, the upper eyelid, the
conjunctiva and cornea of the eye, the nose (including the tip of the
nose, except alae nasi), the nasal mucosa, the frontal sinuses, and
parts of the meninges (the dura and blood vessels).
- The maxillary nerve (V2) carries sensory information from the lower eyelid and cheek, the nares
and upper lip, the upper teeth and gums, the nasal mucosa, the palate
and roof of the pharynx, the maxillary, ethmoid and sphenoid sinuses,
and parts of the meninges.
- The mandibular nerve (V3) carries sensory
information from the lower lip, the lower teeth and gums, the chin and
jaw (except the angle of the jaw, which is supplied by C2-C3), parts of
the external ear, and parts of the meninges. The mandibular nerve
carries touch/position and pain/temperature sensation from the mouth. It
does not carry taste sensation (chorda tympani is responsible for
taste), but one of its branches, the lingual nerve, carries multiple types of nerve fibers that do not originate in the mandibular nerve.
There are many branches within the three trigeminal divisions, which are best represented in this chart.
Motor branches of the trigeminal nerve
Motor branches of the trigeminal nerve are distributed in the mandibular nerve.
These fibers originate in the motor nucleus of the fifth nerve, which
is located near the main trigeminal nucleus in the pons. Motor nerves
are functionally quite different from sensory nerves, and their
association in the peripheral branches of the mandibular nerve is more a
matter of convenience than of necessity.
In classical anatomy, the trigeminal nerve is said to have general somatic afferent (sensory) components, as well as special visceral efferent (motor) components. The motor branches of the trigeminal nerve control the movement of eight muscles, including the four muscles of mastication.
- masseter
- temporalis
- medial pterygoid
- lateral pterygoid
- tensor veli palatini
- mylohyoid
- anterior belly of digastric
- tensor tympani
With the exception of tensor tympani, all of these muscles are involved in biting, chewing and swallowing. All have
bilateral cortical representation. A central lesion (e.g., a stroke),
no matter how large, is unlikely to produce any observable deficit.
Injury to the peripheral nerve can cause paralysis of muscles on one
side of the jaw. The jaw deviates to the paralyzed side when it opens.
This direction of the mandible is due to the action of normal pterygoids
on the opposite side.
Central anatomy of the Trigeminal Nerve
Sensation
Main article: Somatosensory system
There are two basic types of sensation:
touch/position and
pain/temperature.
They are distinguished, roughly speaking, by the fact that
touch/position input comes to attention immediately, whereas
pain/temperature input reaches the level of consciousness only after a
perceptible delay. Think of stepping on a pin. There is immediate
awareness of stepping on something, but it takes a moment before it
starts to hurt.
In general, touch/position information is carried by myelinated
(fast-conducting) nerve fibers, whereas pain/temperature information is
carried by unmyelinated (slow-conducting) nerve fibers. The primary
sensory receptors for touch/position (Meissner’s corpuscles, Merkel's receptors, Pacinian corpuscles, Ruffini’s corpuscles, hair receptors, muscle spindle organs, Golgi tendon organs) are structurally more complex than the primitive receptors for pain/temperature, which are bare nerve endings.
The term "sensation", as used in this article, refers to the
conscious perception of touch/position and pain/temperature information.
It does not refer to the so-called "special senses" (smell, sight,
taste, hearing and balance), which are processed by different cranial
nerves and sent to the cerebral cortex through different pathways. The
perception of magnetic fields, electrical fields, low-frequency
vibrations and infrared radiation by certain nonhuman vertebrates is
processed by the equivalent of the fifth cranial nerve in these animals.
The term "touch", as used in this article, refers to the perception of detailed, localized tactile information, such as
two-point discrimination
(the difference between touching one point and two closely spaced
points) or the difference between grades of sandpaper (coarse, medium
and fine). People that lack touch/position perception can still "feel"
the surface of their bodies, and can therefore perceive "touch" in a
crude, yes-or-no way, but they lack the rich perceptual detail that we
normally experience.
The term "position", as used in this article, refers to conscious proprioception. Proprioceptors (muscle spindle organs and Golgi tendon organs)
provide information about joint position and muscle movement. Much of
this information is processed at an unconscious level (mainly by the cerebellum and the vestibular nuclei). However, some of this information is available at a conscious level.
The two types of sensation in humans, touch/position and
pain/temperature, are processed by different pathways in the central
nervous system. The distinction is hard-wired, and it is maintained all
the way to the cerebral cortex. Within the cerebral cortex, sensations
are further hard-wired to (associated with) other cortical areas.
Sensory pathways of the Trigeminal Nerve
Sensory pathways from the periphery to the cortex are summarized
below. There are separate pathways for touch/position sensation and
pain/temperature sensation. All sensory information is sent to specific
nuclei in the thalamus. Thalamic nuclei, in turn, send information to specific areas in the cerebral cortex.
Each pathway consists of three bundles of nerve fibers, connected in series:
It is noteworthy that the
secondary neurons in each pathway decussate
(cross to the other side of the spinal cord or brainstem). The reason
for this is because initially Spinal Cord forms segmentally. Later on,
decussated fibres reach and connect these segments with the Higher
Centres. The main reason for Decussation is that optic chiasma
occurs(Nasal fibres of the Optic Nerve cross so each cerebral hemisphere
receives the contralateral vision) and to keep interneuronal
connections short(responsible for processing of information) all sensory
and motor pathways converge and diverge respectively to the
contralateral hemisphere.
Sensory pathways are often depicted as chains of
individual
neurons connected in series. This is an oversimplification. Sensory
information is processed and modified at each level in the chain by
interneurons and by input from other areas of the nervous system. For
example, cells in the main trigeminal nucleus ("Main V" in the diagram)
receive input (not shown) from the reticular formation and from the
cerebral cortex. This information contributes to the final output of the
cells in Main V to the thalamus.
C = cervical segment. S = Sacral segment. VPL = Ventral posterolateral nucleus. SI = Primary somatosensory cortex. VM = Ventromedial prefrontal cortex. MD = medial dorsal thalamic nucleus. IL = Intralaminar nucleus. VPM = Ventral posteromedial nucleus. Main V = Main trigeminal nucleus. Spinal V = Spinal trigeminal nucleus.
Touch/position information from the body is carried to the thalamus by the medial lemniscus; touch/position information from the face is carried to the thalamus by the trigeminal lemniscus. Pain/temperature information from the body is carried to the thalamus by the spinothalamic tract; pain/temperature information from the face is carried to the thalamus by the
trigeminothalamic tract (also called the quintothalamic tract).
Pathways for touch/position sensation from the face and body merge in
the brainstem. A single touch/position sensory map of the entire body
is projected onto the thalamus. Likewise, pathways for pain/temperature
sensation from the face and body merge in the brainstem. A single
pain/temperature sensory map of the entire body is projected onto the
thalamus.
From the thalamus, touch/position and pain/temperature information is
projected onto various areas of the cerebral cortex. Exactly where,
when, and how this information becomes conscious is entirely beyond our
understanding at the present time. The explanation of consciousness is
one of the great unsolved mysteries in science.
The details of the pathways connecting the lower body to the cerebral
cortex are beyond the scope of this article. The details of the
pathways connecting the face and mouth to the cerebral cortex are
discussed below.
Trigeminal nucleus
Brainstem nuclei: Red = Motor; Blue = Sensory; Dark Blue = Trigeminal Nucleus
It is not widely appreciated that all sensory information from the
face (all touch/position information and all pain/temperature
information) is sent to the trigeminal nucleus.
In classical anatomy, most sensory information from the face is carried
by the fifth nerve, but sensation from certain parts of the mouth,
certain parts of the ear and certain parts of the meninges is carried by
"general somatic afferent" fibers in cranial nerves VII (the facial nerve), IX (the glossopharyngeal nerve) and X (the vagus nerve).
Without exception, however, all sensory fibers from these nerves
terminate in the trigeminal nucleus. On entering the brainstem, sensory
fibers from V, VII, IX, and X are sorted out and sent to the trigeminal
nucleus, which thus contains a complete sensory map of the face and
mouth. The spinal counterparts of the trigeminal nucleus (cells in the dorsal horn and dorsal column nuclei of the spinal cord) contain a complete sensory map of the rest of the body.
The trigeminal nucleus extends throughout the entire brainstem, from
the midbrain to the medulla, and continues into the cervical cord, where
it merges with the dorsal horn cells of the spinal cord. The nucleus is
divided anatomically into three parts, visible in microscopic sections
of the brainstem. From caudal to rostral (i.e., going up from the
medulla to the midbrain) they are the
spinal trigeminal nucleus, the
main trigeminal nucleus, and the
mesencephalic trigeminal nucleus.
The three parts of the trigeminal nucleus receive different types of
sensory information. The spinal trigeminal nucleus receives
pain/temperature fibers. The main trigeminal nucleus receives
touch/position fibers. The mesencephalic nucleus receives proprioceptor
and mechanoreceptor fibers from the jaws and teeth.
Spinal trigeminal nucleus
The spinal trigeminal nucleus represents pain/temperature sensation from the face. Pain/temperature fibers from peripheral nociceptors
are carried in cranial nerves V, VII, IX, and X. On entering the
brainstem, sensory fibers are grouped together and sent to the spinal
trigeminal nucleus. This bundle of incoming fibers can be identified in
cross sections of the pons and medulla as the
spinal tract of the trigeminal nucleus, which parallels the spinal trigeminal nucleus itself. The spinal tract of V is analogous to, and continuous with, Lissauer's tract in the spinal cord.
The spinal trigeminal nucleus contains a pain/temperature sensory map
of the face and mouth. From the spinal trigeminal nucleus, secondary
fibers cross the midline and ascend in the trigeminothalamic tract (also
called the quintothalamic tract) to the contralateral thalamus.
Pain/temperature fibers are sent to multiple thalamic nuclei. As
discussed below, the central processing of pain/temperature information
is markedly different from the central processing of touch/position
information.
Somatotopic representation
Onion skin distribution of the
trigeminal nerve
Exactly how pain/temperature fibers from the face are distributed to
the spinal trigeminal nucleus has been a subject of considerable
controversy. The present understanding is that all pain/temperature
information from all areas of the human body is represented (in the
spinal cord and brainstem) in an ascending, caudal-to-rostral fashion.
Information from the lower extremities is represented in the lumbar
cord. Information from the upper extremities is represented in the
thoracic cord. Information from the neck and the back of the head is
represented in the cervical cord. Information from the face and mouth is
represented in the spinal trigeminal nucleus.
Within the spinal trigeminal nucleus, information is represented in
an onion skin fashion. The lowest levels of the nucleus (in the upper
cervical cord and lower medulla) represent peripheral areas of the face
(the scalp, ears and chin). Higher levels (in the upper medulla)
represent more central areas (nose, cheeks, lips). The highest levels
(in the pons) represent the mouth, teeth, and pharyngeal cavity.
The onion skin distribution is entirely different from the dermatome
distribution of the peripheral branches of the fifth nerve. Lesions that
destroy lower areas of the spinal trigeminal nucleus (but which spare
higher areas) preserve pain/temperature sensation in the nose (V
1), upper lip (V
2) and mouth (V
3) while removing pain/temperature sensation from the forehead (V
1), cheeks (V
2) and chin (V
3).
Analgesia in this distribution is "nonphysiologic" in the traditional
sense, because it crosses over several dermatomes. Nevertheless,
analgesia in exactly this distribution is found in humans after surgical
sectioning of the spinal tract of the trigeminal nucleus.
The spinal trigeminal nucleus sends pain/temperature information to the thalamus. It also sends information to the mesencephalon and the reticular formation
of the brainstem. The latter pathways are analogous to the
spinomesencephalic and spinoreticular tracts of spinal cord, which send
pain/temperature information from the rest of the body to the same
areas. The mesencephalon modulates painful input before it reaches the
level of consciousness. The reticular formation is responsible for the
automatic (unconscious) orientation of the body to painful stimuli.
Main trigeminal nucleus
The main trigeminal nucleus
represents touch/position sensation from the face. It is located in the
pons, close to the entry site of the fifth nerve. Fibers carrying
touch/position information from the face and mouth (via cranial nerves
V, VII, IX, and X) are sent to the main trigeminal nucleus when they
enter the brainstem.
The main trigeminal nucleus contains a touch/position sensory map of
the face and mouth, just as the spinal trigeminal nucleus contains a
complete pain/temperature map. The main nucleus is analogous to the dorsal column nuclei (the gracile and cuneate nuclei) of the spinal cord, which contain a touch/position map of the rest of the body.
From the main trigeminal nucleus, secondary fibers cross the midline and ascend in the trigeminal lemniscus to the contralateral thalamus. The trigeminal lemniscus runs parallel to the medial lemniscus, which carries touch/position information from the rest of the body to the thalamus.
Some sensory information from the teeth and jaws is sent from the main trigeminal nucleus to the
ipsilateral thalamus, via the small dorsal trigeminal tract. Thus touch/position information from the teeth and jaws of one side of the face is represented
bilaterally in the thalamus (and hence in the cortex). The reason for this special processing is discussed below.
Mesencephalic trigeminal nucleus
The mesencephalic trigeminal nucleus
is not really a "nucleus." Rather, it is a sensory ganglion (like the
trigeminal ganglion) that happens to be embedded in the brainstem.
The mesencephalic "nucleus" is the sole exception to the general rule
that sensory information passes through peripheral sensory ganglia
before entering the central nervous system.
Only certain types of sensory fibers have cell bodies in the mesencephalic nucleus: proprioceptor
fibers from the jaw and mechanoreceptor fibers from the teeth. Some of
these incoming fibers go to the motor nucleus of V, thus entirely
bypassing the pathways for conscious perception. The jaw jerk reflex
is an example. Tapping the jaw elicits a reflex closure of the jaw, in
exactly the same way that tapping the knee elicits a reflex kick of the
lower leg. Other incoming fibers from the teeth and jaws go to the main
nucleus of V. As noted above, this information is projected
bilaterally to the thalamus. It is available for conscious perception.
Activities like biting, chewing and swallowing require symmetrical,
simultaneous coordination of both sides of the body. They are
essentially automatic activities, to which we pay little conscious
attention. They involve a sensory component (feedback about
touch/position) that is processed at a largely unconscious level.
The unusual anatomy of "mesencephalic V" has been found in all vertebrates, with the exception of lampreys and hagfishes.
Lampreys and hagfishes are the only vertebrates without jaws. It is
evident, therefore, that information about biting, chewing and
swallowing is singled out for special processing in the vertebrate
brainstem, specifically in the mesencephalic nucleus.
Lampreys and hagfishes have cells in their brainstems that can be
identified as the evoutionary precursors of the mesencephalic nucleus.
These "internal ganglion" cells were discovered in the latter part of
the 19th century by a young medical student named Sigmund Freud.
[2]
Pathways to the thalamus and the cortex
We have defined sensation as the conscious perception of
touch/proprioception and pain/temperature information. With the sole
exception of smell, all sensory input (touch/position, pain/temperature,
sight, taste, hearing, and balance) is sent to the thalamus before
being sent to the cortex.
The thalamus is anatomically subdivided into a number of separate
nuclei. The thalamic nuclei involved in sensation, and their cortical
projections, are discussed below.
Touch/position sensation
Touch/position information from the body is sent to the ventral posterolateral nucleus (VPL) of the thalamus. Touch/position information from the face is sent to the ventral posteromedial nucleus (VPM) of the thalamus. From the VPL and VPM, information is projected to the primary sensory cortex (SI) in the postcentral gyrus of the parietal lobe.
The representation of sensory information in SI is organized
somatotopically. Adjacent areas in the body are represented by adjacent
areas in the cortex. When body parts are drawn in proportion to the
density of their innervation, however, the result is a strangely
distorted "little man," the sensory homunculus.
Many textbooks reproduce the classic Penfield-Rasmussen
diagram, which is now outdated. For example, the toes and genitals are
shown in the classic diagram on the mesial surface of the cortex, when
in fact they are represented on the convexity.
[3]
What is more important, the classic diagram implies a single primary
sensory map of the body, when in fact there are multiple primary maps.
At least four separate, anatomically distinct sensory homunculi have
been identified in SI. They represent different blends of input from
surface receptors, deep receptors, rapidly adapting receptors, and
slowly adapting peripheral receptors. For example, smooth objects will
activate certain cells, whereas edged objects will activate other cells.
Information from all four maps in the primary sensory cortex (SI) is
sent to the secondary sensory cortex (SII) in the parietal lobe. SII
contains two more sensory homunculi.
In general, information from one side of the body is represented on the
opposite side in SI, but on
both sides in SII. Functional MRI imaging of a defined stimulus (e.g., stroking the skin with a toothbrush) "lights up" a
single focus in SI and
two foci in SII.
Pain/temperature sensation
Pain/temperature
information is sent to the VPL (body) and VPM (face) of the thalamus
(the same nuclei that receive touch/position information). From the
thalamus, pain/temperature and touch/position information is projected
onto SI.
In marked contrast to touch/position information, however,
pain/temperature information is also sent to other thalamic nuclei, and
is projected onto additional areas of the cerebral cortex. Some
pain/temperature fibers are sent to the medial dorsal thalamic nucleus
(MD), which projects to the anterior cingulate cortex. Other fibers are
sent to the ventromedial (VM) nucleus of the thalamus, which projects
to the insular cortex. Finally, some fibers are sent to the intralaminar (IL) nuclei of the thalamus via the reticular formation. The IL project diffusely to all parts of the cerebral cortex.
The insula and cingulate cortex
are areas of the brain that represent our perception of touch/position
and pain/temperature in the context of other simultaneous perceptions
(sight, smell, taste, hearing and balance), and in the context of our
memories and present emotional state. It is noteworthy that peripheral
pain/temperature information is channeled directly into the brain at
these deep levels, without prior processing. This contrasts markedly
with the way that touch/position information is handled.
Diffuse thalamic projections from the IL and other thalamic nuclei
are responsible for one’s overall level of consciousness. The thalamus
and reticular formation "activate" the entire brain. It is noteworthy
that peripheral pain/temperature information feeds directly into this
system as well.
Summary of the Trigeminal Nerve
The complex processing of pain/temperature information in the
thalamus and cerebral cortex (as opposed to the relatively simple,
straightforward processing of touch/position information) reflects a
phylogenetically older, more primitive sensory system. The rich,
detailed information we receive from peripheral touch/position receptors
is superimposed on a background of awareness, memory and emotions that
is set, in part, by peripheral pain/temperature receptors.
The thresholds for touch/position perception are relatively easy to
measure, and are similar in all humans. The thresholds for
pain/temperature perception are difficult to define and even more
difficult to measure. "Touch" is an objective sensation. "Pain" is a
highly individualized, personal sensation that varies markedly among
different people. It is conditioned by their memories and by their
emotions. The fundamental anatomical differences between the pathways
for touch/position perception and pain/temperature sensation help to
explain why pain, especially chronic pain, is so difficult to manage.
Wallenberg syndrome
Wallenberg syndrome
(also called the lateral medullary syndrome) is a classic clinical
demonstration of the anatomy of the fifth nerve. It provides a useful
summary of essential points about the processing of sensory information
by the trigeminal nerve.
A stroke
usually affects only one side of the body. If a stroke causes loss of
sensation, the deficit will be lateralized to the right side or the left
side of the body. The only exceptions to this rule are certain spinal
cord lesions and the medullary syndromes, of which Wallenberg syndrome
is the most famous example. In Wallenberg syndrome, a stroke causes loss
of pain/temperature sensation from
one side of the face and the
other side of the body.
The explanation involves the anatomy of the brainstem. In the
medulla, the ascending spinothalamic tract (which carries
pain/temperature information from the
opposite side of the body)
is adjacent to the ascending spinal tract of the fifth nerve (which
carries pain/temperature information from the
same side of the
face). A stroke that cuts off the blood supply to this area (e.g., a
clot in the posterior inferior cerebellar artery) destroys
both tracts simultaneously. The result is loss of pain/temperature sensation (but
not
touch/position sensation) in a unique "checkerboard" pattern
(ipsilateral face, contralateral body) that is entirely diagnostic.
See also
Notes
- ^ Mnemonic at medicalmnemonics.com 38
- ^ Butler AB, Hodos W. Comparative Vertebrate Neuroanatomy, 2nd ed. Wiley-Interscience, 2005.
- ^ Kell CA, von Kriegstein K, Rösler A, Kleinschmidt A, Laufs H (2005). "The sensory cortical representation of the human penis: revisiting somatotopy in the male homunculus". J. Neurosci. 25 (25): 5984–5987. DOI:10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0712-05.2005. PMID 15976087.
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