The Bones
JUST WRITE THE ESSAY, I WILL DO THE SLIDES MYSELF THEME of your SLP: Teaching your first Anatomy & Physiology course! For your SLP, you have been asked to teach an anatomy and physiology course for a local vocational nursing school. In order to do this, you are going to need to prepare a PowerPoint presentation that will be used in your lectures. In this second SLP, you will prepare a presentation consisting of 15 slides, in which you provide your audience with information on the following areas: Introduce the skeletal system in general and differentiate between the axial and appendicular skeleton Include illustrations of the bones of the skull. Differentiate between: The facial bones and the cranial bones the anterior, middle, and posterior cranial fossa 3. Trace the pathway of the following major nerves through the corresponding openings of the bones of the skull for: CNI the Olfactory Nerve CNII the Optic Nerve CNV the Trigeminal Nerve CNVII the Facial Nerve CNX the Vagus Nerve SLP Assignment Expectations and Available Resources Resources: The ebrary bookshelf books Concise Handbook of Human Anatomy and Cranial Nerves in Health and Disease will be essential reads/resources for this assignment. You may also need to do some independent searching. Content of Slides: Your presentation should address each of the areas listed above. Speaker notes should be sufficient in depth and breadth to demonstrate to me that you understood the topics under consideration in this module! Number of Slides: 15
The Skeletal System
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The Skeletal System
The human skull is held together by facial and cranial bones. In total, there are 14 and 8 facial and cranial bones respectively. The human brain is responsible for taste, smell, equilibrium, vision and hearing (Pauwels, 2010). This makes it one the most important parts of the human body, because of this, these bones protect and attach muscles that along movements such as chewing and facial expressions.
The cranial fossa is located at the floor of the human skull, or the cranium. These brain parts are referred to as the posterior, anterior and the middle fossae (Pauwels, 2002). They are responsible for the shape of the brain. In concise, they accommodate the brain by providing specific shapes (Pauwels, 2010). The facial and cranial bones are held by sutures joints.
The Trigeminal Nerve (CN V) functions in different ways; first, through its ophthalmic function, it provides the frontal area such as the nasal mucosa and eyeball sensory innervations (Marieb, 2006). S...