Clinical Case - Infratemporal Fossa & Oral Cavity
20-year-old woman whose impacted right lower wisdom tooth was surgically removed. The operation lasted about an hour, and the dental surgeon suspected that some nerves might have been bruised during the operation. The patient presented with loss of sensation in the gums of her lower jaw, and her mouth was slightly dry. You examined taste sensation in the tongue and found that it was diminished in the anterior two-thirds but it was normal in the posterior portion.
Questions:
1. Which nerve is most likely to have been bruised in this patient?
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The lingual nerve, which is a branch of the posterior division of the mandibular nerve (CN V3).
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2. How would you explain the patient's complaints?
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The lingual nerve supplies general sensory fibers to the anterior two-thirds of the tongue, the floor of the mouth and the gums of the mandibular teeth. It carries the chorda tympani nerve, which carries taste fibers from the anterior two-thirds of the tongue and parasympathetic innervation to the submandibular and sublingual salivary glands.[/HIDE]
3. Which nerve is responsible for sensation in the posterior third of the tongue?
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The glossopharyngeal (CN IX) supplies taste and general sensation to the posterior third of the tongue.
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