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Linda Wilson-Pauwels AOCA BScAAM Med edD - Cranial Nerves: Anatomy and Clinical Comments

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Featuring three-dimensional, colour-coded illustrations, this classic work describes how the 12 major nerve systems connect the brain to the body systems they control. The drawings show the course and position of each nerve, as well as its functional modalities: this allows students to learn not only the location of each nerve system, but how the systems act in concert to perform specific functions. This text serves as a teaching tool for all health science students who study neuro- and gross anatomy, including students in medicine, dentistry, pharmacy, nursing and physical therapy.

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title Cranial Nerves Anatomy and Clinical Comments author - photo 1

title:Cranial Nerves : Anatomy and Clinical Comments
author:Wilson-Pauwels, Linda.; Akesson, E. J.; Stewart, Patricia A.
publisher:B.C. Decker, Inc.
isbn10 | asin:1550090755
print isbn13:9781550090758
ebook isbn13:9780585231686
language:English
subjectCranial nerves--Anatomy.
publication date:1988
lcc:QM471.W55 1988eb
ddc:611/.83
subject:Cranial nerves--Anatomy.
Page i
Cranial Nerves
Anatomy and Clinical Comments
Linda Wilson-Pauwels, A.O.C.A., B.Sc.Aam, M.Ed., Ed.D.
Associate Professor and Chair
Biomedical Communications, Department of Surgery
Faculty of Medicine
University of Toronto
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Elizabeth J. Akesson, B.A., M.Sc.
Assistant Professor
Department of Anatomy
Faculty of Medicine
University of British Columbia
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Patricia A. Stewart, B.Sc., M.Sc., Ph.D.
Professor
Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology
Faculty of Medicine
University of Toronto
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
1988
B.C. Decker Inc. Hamilton London
Page ii
Cranial Nerves Anatomy and Clinical Comments - image 2
B.C. Decker Inc. 4 Hughson Street South P.O. Box 620, L.C.D. 1 Hamilton, Ontario L8N 3K7 Tel: 905-522-7017 Fax: 905-522-7839 e-mail: info @ bcdecker.com Website: http// www.bcdecker.com
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without prior written permission from the publisher.
1988 Linda Wilson-Pauwels, Elizabeth Akesson, Patricia Stewart.
98 99 00 01 /WKT/ 9 8 7 6 5 4
ISBN 1-55009-075-5
Sales and Distribution
United States
Blackwell Science Inc. Commerce Place 350 Main Street Malden, MA 02148 U.S.A. Tel: 1-800-215-1000
Canada
B.C. Decker Inc. 4 Hughson Street South P.O. Box 620, L.C.D. 1 Hamilton, Ontario L8N 3K7 Tel: 905-522-7017 Fax: 905-522-7839 e-mail: info @ bcdecker.com
Japan
Igaku-Shoin Ltd. Tokyo International P.O. Box 5063 1-28-36 Hongo, Bunkyo-ku Tokyo 113, Japan Tel: 3 3817 5680 Fax: 3 3815 7805
U.K., Europe, Scandinavia, Middle East
Blackwell Science Ltd. c/o Marston Book Services Ltd. P.O. Box 87 Oxford OX2 0DT England Tel: 44-1865-79115
Australia
Blackwell Science Pty, Ltd. 54 University Street Carlton, Victoria 3053 Australia Tel: 03 9347 0300 Fax: 03 9349 3016
Korea
Jee Seung Publishing Company 236-15, Neung-Dong Seoul, Korea Tel: 02 454 5463 Fax: 02 456 5058
India
Jaypee Brothers Medical Publishers Ltd. B-3, Emca House, 23/23B Ansari Road, Daryaganj, P.B. 7193, New Delhi - 110002, India Tel: 91 11 327 2143 Fax: 91 11 327 6490
Notice: The authors and publisher have made every effort to ensure that the patient care recommended herein, including choice of drugs and drug dosages, is in accord with the accepted standard and practice at the time of publication. However, since research and regulation constantly change clinical standards, the reader is urged to check the product information sheet included in the package of each drug, which includes recommended doses, warnings, and contraindications. This is particularly important with new or infrequently used drugs.
Printed in Hong Kong.
Page iii
Preface
This textbook evolved in an attempt to bring together the neuro- and gross anatomy of the cranial nerves. To give the student a three dimensional appreciation of these nerves and their course, the emphasis has been placed on colorcoded functional drawings of the nerve pathways that extend from the periphery of the body to the brain (sensory input) and from the brain to the periphery (motor output). Designed for the student who is studying neuro- and gross anatomy for the first time, Cranial Nerves should prove useful to students of the health sciences whether they be in medicine, rehabilitation medicine, dentistry, pharmacy, nursing, physical and health education, or any program that requires a knowledge of the cranial nerves. In addition, the book should prove a valuable quick reference for residents in neurology, neurosurgery, otolaryngology, and maxillofacial surgery.
A great deal of interest was aroused when we committed the initial drawings and texts to book format, so this precursor was expanded into Cranial Nerves. The book is arranged in two sections. In the first, the twelve cranial nerves are broken down into their component modalities also included are pertinent clinical comments. The second section focuses on the groups of cranial nerves that act in concert to perform specific functions. Thus the common complaint of students that an overview of a specific region and its overall nerve supply is often difficult to assemble has been addressed.
Page iv
Acknowledgements
In the early stages, Dr. E.G. (Mike) Bertram, Department of Anatomy and Professor Stephen Gilbert, Department of Art as Applied to Medicine, University of Toronto, were particularly helpful in making critiques of the drawings. Dr. C.R. Braekevelt and Dr. J.S. Thliveris, of the Department of Anatomy, University of Manitoba, faithfully critiqued all drawings and text and to them we are most grateful. Ted Davis, a first-year medical student at the University of Toronto, has also read and provided critiques for the text and the drawings. His student's perspective has been particularly valuable. Dr. Peter Carlen, of the Addiction Research Foundation Clinical Institute, Playfair Neuroscience Institute, Departments of Medicine (Neurology) and Physiology, University of Toronto, both read and prepared critiques of the text and the drawings and updated us on clinical data. We are also indebted to the Bradshaw Errington Scholarship Fund that is under the administration of the Faculty of Medicine, and which awarded to Linda Wilson-Pauwels a scholarship that enabled her to do her initial drawings. We also owe thanks to Mrs. Pam Topham, the Anatomy Department secretary, who good-naturedly rescued us from computer errors, thus enabling us to complete our task.
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