The geniculate ganglion is associated with which cranial nerve?

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Multiple Choice

The geniculate ganglion is associated with which cranial nerve?

Explanation:
The geniculate ganglion is the sensory ganglion of the facial nerve (cranial nerve VII). It houses the cell bodies of the sensory neurons that carry taste from the anterior two-thirds of the tongue via the chorda tympani, and some somatic sensation from parts of the external ear carried by fibers that join the facial nerve. The other nerves listed have their own distinct sensory or motor ganglia, not the geniculate: glossopharyngeal and vagus have their own, separate sensory ganglia, and the trigeminal nerve has the trigeminal ganglion for facial sensation.

The geniculate ganglion is the sensory ganglion of the facial nerve (cranial nerve VII). It houses the cell bodies of the sensory neurons that carry taste from the anterior two-thirds of the tongue via the chorda tympani, and some somatic sensation from parts of the external ear carried by fibers that join the facial nerve. The other nerves listed have their own distinct sensory or motor ganglia, not the geniculate: glossopharyngeal and vagus have their own, separate sensory ganglia, and the trigeminal nerve has the trigeminal ganglion for facial sensation.

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