3, 7, 9 and 10 (lll, Vll, lX and X) for sure. Two sources included 5=V. Two sources did not. You might want to leave V out.
tenth cranial nerve. Name of that nerve is vagus.
Vagus nerve CN X
VAGUS
3,7,9,10
vagus
X vagus
The second cranial nerve is the optic nerve.
The nerves involved in diplopia include three cranial nerves: the oculomotor nerve (third cranial nerve), the abducens nerve (sixth cranial nerve), and the trochlear nerve (fourth cranial nerve).
A dilated pupil is when the black part of the eye becomes big due to reactions to light or medication. A fixed pupil is one where the black part is stuck open big due to pressure inside of the eye.
the parasympathetic fibers of the cranial nerve number three.
vagus
X vagus nerve
X (Vagus Nerve)
Vagus nerve (CN 10) innervates your thoracoabdominal viscera by the parasympathetic nervous system.
The name of the nerve is vagus nerve. It is the tenth cranial nerve. It comes all the way from skull to supply the organs from thorax and most from the abdomen also. It is purely parasympathetic nerve.
X vagus
Cranial nerve #2 - optic nerve - special sensory for vision Cranial nerve #3 - occulomotor nerve - motor for extraoccular muscles & parasympathetic to ciliary ganglion Cranial nerve #4 - trochlear nerve - motor for extraoccular muscle (superior oblique) Cranial nerve #6 - abduscens nerve - motor for extraoccular muscle (lateral rectus)
V is responsible for tear reflex in response to cornea irritation, VII has a parasympathetic branch responsible for emotional tears.
Parasympathetic
The vagus nerve (cranial nerve X) slows the heart and increases motility of the digestive tract. It is part of the parasympathetic nervous system which is a branch of the autonomic nervous system.
Most of the parasympathetic motor pathway goes through oculomotor, facial, glassopharyngeal and vagus nerve. They are third, seventh, ninth and tenth cranial nerves. There is sacral out flow also.