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The Trigeminal Nerve (CN V): Ocular and Orbital Anatomy. (Ophthalmic, Maxillary and Mandibular Divisions) This video provides a detailed anatomical overview of the trigeminal nerve (cranial nerve V), with special emphasis on its orbital and ocular components. The course of the nerve is illustrated from its emergence at the brainstem to its main divisions, highlighting their anatomical relationships within the orbit. The trigeminal nerve arises from the pons with a large sensory root and a smaller motor root. The motor component innervates the muscles of mastication—including the masseter, temporalis and pterygoids—as well as accessory muscles such as the mylohyoid, the anterior belly of the digastric, the tensor veli palatini and the tensor tympani, allowing essential functions such as chewing, swallowing and speech. The sensory root expands to form the trigeminal (Gasserian) ganglion, located in Meckel’s cave in the middle cranial fossa. From this ganglion arise the three divisions of the trigeminal nerve. Special attention is given to the ophthalmic division (V1), a purely sensory nerve supplying the forehead, scalp, upper eyelid, cornea and nasal cavity. The nasociliary nerve—its principal sensory branch—is illustrated as it enters the orbit through the superior orbital fissure within the annulus of Zinn, courses medially in relation to the optic nerve, and gives branches to the ciliary ganglion, the globe and the paranasal sinuses before terminating as the infratrochlear nerve. The maxillary division (V2), also purely sensory, innervates the cheek, lower eyelid, upper lip, palate and nasal cavity, while the mandibular division (V3) is a mixed nerve, providing sensory innervation to the lower face, chin and tongue, and motor innervation to the muscles of mastication. A precise understanding of trigeminal nerve anatomy is essential for interpreting ocular and periocular sensory symptoms, localizing lesions and correlating clinical findings with imaging studies. ⭐ HIGHLIGHTS / KEY POINTS Origin of the trigeminal nerve at the brainstem Sensory and motor roots: anatomical and functional distinction Trigeminal (Gasserian) ganglion and Meckel’s cave Ophthalmic division (V1): orbital and ocular sensory innervation Nasociliary nerve: course, branches and clinical relevance Maxillary (V2) and mandibular (V3) divisions Clinical importance in ocular and periocular symptom localization Essential for lesion localization and interpretation of ocular sensory symptoms. J.R. Fontenla, MD, PhD, MBA. Barcelona, Spain. #trigeminalnerve #orbitalanatomy #neuroophthalmology #ophthalmology #medicaleducation