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Definition of Oculomotor nerve
1. Noun. Supplies extrinsic muscles of the eye.
Generic synonyms: Cranial Nerve
Definition of Oculomotor nerve
1. Noun. The third of twelve paired cranial nerves, which controls most of the eye's movements and constriction of the pupil and maintains an open eyelid. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Medical Definition of Oculomotor nerve
1.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Oculomotor Nerve
Literary usage of Oculomotor nerve
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Monographic Medicine by William Robie Patten Emerson, Guido Guerrini, William Brown, Wendell Christopher Phillips, John Whitridge Williams, John Appleton Swett, Hans Günther, Mario Mariotti, Hugh Grant Rowell (1916)
"The oculomotor nerve (N. oculomotorius) This is a pure motor nerve. If all its
fibers be interrupted, there will be total paralysis in its domain, ..."
2. The American Journal of the Medical Sciences by Southern Society for Clinical Investigation (U.S.) (1908)
"Congenital Palsy of the oculomotor nerve with Continuous Movements of the ...
the oculomotor nerve, with constant variations in the diameter of the pupil, ..."
3. Anatomy of the Cat by Jacob Ellsworth Reighard, Herbert Spencer Jennings (1901)
"The third or oculomotor nerve arises (Fig. 138, ///) from the pedunculus cerebri
and passes into the orbit through the orbital fissure. ..."
4. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease by American Neurological Association, Philadelphia Neurological Society, Chicago Neurological Society, New York Neurological Association, Boston Society of Psychiatry and Neurology (1914)
"All the fibers in each muscular branch of the oculomotor nerve— with the exception
of that to the internal rectus muscle—were primitively •direct; ..."
5. Anatomy, Descriptive and Applied by Henry Gray (1913)
"The superior division of the oculomotor nerve lies immediately beneath the Rectus
superior, while the nasociliary nerve crosses the optic nerve to reach the ..."
6. Text-book of ophthalmology by Ernst Fuchs (1892)
"But the fibers which arise from it do not join with the trunk of the oculomotor
nerve, which runs downward, but pass in the opposite directions upward and ..."