brain is confused as to which side of the body it is supposed to control b/c nerves are twisted
nerves carrying just sensory fibers are referred to as sensory and or what nerves?
no
Nerve fibers scattered throughout the dermis are associated with sensing touch, pressure, temperature, and pain. These nerve fibers help to relay sensory information to the brain for processing and response.
No, the glossopharyngeal nerve (CN IX) is not the only cranial nerve that contains sensory fibers. Other cranial nerves, such as the trigeminal nerve (CN V), facial nerve (CN VII), vestibulocochlear nerve (CN VIII), and vagus nerve (CN X), also contain sensory fibers in addition to motor or mixed fibers.
The ventral ramus of a spinal nerve contains both sensory and motor nerve fibers. These fibers innervate the muscles, joints, and skin on the front part of the body.
Both Afferent and Efferentboth sensory and motorContains motor & sensory fibers!The spinal cord consists of nerve fibers that are afferent and efferent.
sensory
A mixed nerve, such as the trigeminal nerve, contains both sensory and motor fibers that can send and receive messages. These nerves are responsible for carrying both sensory information from the body to the brain and motor commands from the brain to the muscles.
axons of sensory neurons
yes
Yes, a nerve fiber can carry both sensory and motor impulses, depending on the type of nerve. A mixed nerve contains both sensory (afferent) and motor (efferent) fibers, allowing it to transmit signals in both directions: sensory information from the body to the central nervous system and motor commands from the central nervous system to the muscles. However, individual nerve fibers typically specialize in either sensory or motor functions.
The vestibulocochlear nerve (CN VIII) contains the sensory fibers involved in hearing. It carries auditory information from the cochlea of the inner ear to the brain for processing. Damage to this nerve can result in hearing loss or other auditory issues.