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The glossopharyngeal nerve is the ninth of twelve cranial nerves. It exits the brainstem out from the sides of the upper medulla, just rostral (closer to the nose) to the vagus nerve.
There are a number of functions of the glossopharyngeal nerve:
The glossopharyngeal nerve, being mostly sensory, does not have a nucleus of its own. Instead it must project into many different structures in the brainstem.
Taste from the back of the tongue, and information from the carotid bodies enter the nucleus of tractus solitarius. Visceral pain goes to the spinal nucleus of the trigeminal nerve.
The neurons for the single muscle (stylopharyngeus) supplied by nerve IX are in the nucleus ambiguus.
The gag reflex is absent in damage of the glossopharyngeus nerve.