The nerve responsible for blinking is the facial nerve. If you are unable to blink, it could be due to damage or dysfunction of this nerve, which may result in a condition known as facial nerve palsy or Bell's palsy. Immediate medical attention is necessary if you experience sudden inability to blink.
The symptoms described indicate damage to the ophthalmic division of the trigeminal nerve. The absence of the blink reflex is a sign of trigeminal nerve dysfunction. Further evaluation and imaging may be needed to determine the underlying cause.
The olfactory nerve.
The Go phase is the stage that is most associated with a cell that is unable to divide again such as a muscle or nerve cell. Generally, brain and nerve cells are not able to regenerate after injury because they have left the cell cycle and are unable to return.
Another name for the optic nerve head is the optic disc.
This is the menace response, in which the eye perceives an object traveling towards it and the eyelids are slammed shut. The nerve relay is cranial nerve II (optic nerve), optic chiasma, visual cortex, cranial nerve V (trigeminal nerve).
The third cranial nerve, the oculomotor is responsible for blinking and most other eyelid movement.
All geckos, like snakes, have fused eyelids that make them unable to blink. To clean their eyeballs geckos lick them with protrusible notched tongues.
anterior tibilias
PCH - Blink Thier first name was DUCK TAPE.
The symptoms described indicate damage to the ophthalmic division of the trigeminal nerve. The absence of the blink reflex is a sign of trigeminal nerve dysfunction. Further evaluation and imaging may be needed to determine the underlying cause.
leopard gecko
Leopard Gecko.
The Trochlear Nerve
Neuron is another name for a nerve cell.
Neighborhoods
the nerve tissue
phrenic nerve