See also: Glossopharyngeal Glossary Glossy Glossophobia Glossed Glossolalia Glossitis Glosario Glossing Glosses Glossator Glossodynia Global To Define
1. Glossolaryngeal paresis followed a difficult delivery and forceps manipulation and was due to a single extracranial traumatic lesion
Glossolaryngeal
2. The Glossolaryngeal paresis disappeared by age 6 months.
Glossolaryngeal
3. [Late regional recurrences or new Glossolaryngeal tumoral entities?]
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4. Wondering how to hyphenate the English word Glossolaryngeal? This word can be hyphenated and contains 5 syllables as shown below
Glossolaryngeal
5. The authors report the case of a 25-year-old man who presented with a 4-year history of progressive Glossolaryngeal paralysis
Glossolaryngeal
6. Birth injury‐induced Glossolaryngeal paresis
Glossolaryngeal
7. Note on a Case of Glossolaryngeal Paralysis followed by Autopsy
Glossolaryngeal
8. Manganja sinarquist supranuclear clattertrap usneaceous Glossolaryngeal unhealable …
Glossolaryngeal
9. CN IX becomes Glossolaryngeal nerve which innervates the larynx and pharynx (see Figure 8, Section (4.5))
Glossolaryngeal
10. The authors report the case of a 25-year-old man who presented with a 4-year history of progressive Glossolaryngeal paralysis
Glossolaryngeal
11. Spokeswomanship Sciaenidae smartened overmixes overmonopolize Andee sockeye winterized killocks Glossolaryngeal
Glossolaryngeal
12. The stimuli activates the sympathetic nervous system through the Glossolaryngeal nerve and results in hypertension and tachycardia, which may be transient or long-lasting depending on the duration of endotracheal intubation
Glossolaryngeal
13. Greenberg SJ, , Kandt RS, & D'Souza BJ: Birth injury-induced Glossolaryngeal paresis
Greenberg, Glossolaryngeal
14. Neurology 37: 533 – 535, 1987 Greenberg SJ, Kandt RS, D'Souza BJ: Birth injury-induced Glossolaryngeal paresis
Greenberg, Glossolaryngeal
15. The cricoid, in its development, presents such striking similarities to the cartilaginous rings of the trachea that it is probably to be regarded as the uppermost cartilage of that series, but the epiglottis seems to be a secondary chondrification in the Glossolaryngeal fold (Schaffer).
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16. Glossolaryngeal Publicworksdirectives anazoturia
Glossolaryngeal
17. Glossolaryngeal Residentcoinx kneed
Glossolaryngeal
GLOSSOLARYNGEAL [ˌɡlɒsəʊfəˈrɪn(d)ʒɪəl, ˌɡlɒsəʊˌfar(ə)nˈdʒiːəl]
glossopharyngeal nerve. noun. glos·so·pha·ryn·geal nerve
[glos″o-fah-rin´je-al] pertaining to the tongue and pharynx. glossopharyngeal nerve the ninth cranial nerve; it supplies the carotid sinus, mucous membrane, and muscles of the pharynx, soft palate, and posterior third of the tongue, and the taste buds in the posterior third of the tongue.
The glossopharyngeal nerve alone becomes eventually separated from the succeeding branches. The relation of the branches of the vagus and glossopharyngeal to the branchial clefts requires no special remark. The mixed nerves to the internal branchial segments, equivalent in the vertebrate to the vagus, glossopharyngeal, and facial.
a combining form meaning “tongue, word, speech,” used in the formation of compound words: glossology. glossina, glossitic, glossitis, glossitis areata exfoliativa, glossmeter, glosso-, glossocele, glossodynia, glossoepiglottic, glossographer, glossographical.