ORIGIN, DISTRIBUTION, AND USES, OF THE SPINAL ACCESSORY NERVE.
β Scribed by Hayashida, Akira
- Book ID
- 122443847
- Publisher
- The Lancet
- Year
- 1843
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 114 KB
- Volume
- 40
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0140-6736
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π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The spinal accessory nerve in mammals is usually considered to be predominantly eff erent in character. Recently, Straus and Howell ('36) reviewed the literature bearing on the phylogeny of this nerve arid its musculature and concluded that : "A41though originally a mixed nerve, with ganglion cells
The spinal portion of the eleventh cranial nerve is usually considered to be purely motor. However, it has been known for many years that scattered groups of nerve cells of the sensory type occur along the course of its intracranial rootlets, and Fahmy ('27) recently described an extracranial gangli