Ear and Temporal Bone- Gilland Flashcards
Temporal bone consists of:
squamous petrous
Difference between EAM and IAM
The internal auditory meatus (also meatus acusticus internus, internal acoustic meatus, internal auditory canal, or internal acoustic canal) is a canal within the petrous part of the temporal bone of the skull between the posterior cranial fossa and the inner ear. The ear canal (external acoustic meatus, external auditory meatus, EAM; Latin: meatus acusticus externus) is a tube running from the outer ear to the middle ear.
Petrous Temporal Bone
-Intracranial surfaces are covered by dura of middle and posterior cranial fossae -surrounded by Dural Venous Sinuses: Cavernous Sinus Superior Petrosal Sinus Inferior Petrosal Sinus Sigmoid Sinus
Petrous part of the Temporal Bone
-means stony or hard and is very densely mineralized much more than most bones because it has the inner ear inside of it -the part that contains the middle ear cavity, the inner ear cavity, and passing through it are internal carotid artery, right next to it leaving the skull would be the internal jugular vein and the CN VII, IX, X (either go through the bone or send branches into the bone to provide critical innervation) -has internal auditory meatus in the middle -is completely covered by dura on its upper surface
External Ear Pinna (= auricle, = external ear)
-the end of the ear canal is the tympanic membrane -made up of elastic cartilage covered by thin skin -funnels sound waves into canal -asymmetric path assists vertical localization of sound sources -helix; antihelix (deep to the helix); tragus (funny little piece in front of the ear); concha (shell in the antihelix); lobule (lower part of the ear) makes up the great outer curvature of the ear -auricular muscles which are part of the muscles of facial expression ??and innervated by facial nerve; there is no significant functional aspect of these muscles
Middle Ear
-when you cross through the tympanic membrane you enter into the middle ear which is very long because the pharyngotympanic tube which opens in the pharynx is an extension of the middle ear cavity -contains the ear ossicles that when infected gives you intense pain: -malleus (hammer): has manubrium which was attached to TM; neck is where the chorda tympani passes across, head has an articular facet which will articulate with the articular facet of the incus; anterior process -incus (anvil) -stapes (stirrup)
Inner Ear
-seed of your vestibular and auditory organs
General view of temporal
squamous portion: -thin lamina extends off the petrous part which is the squamous part of the temporal bone which is flat -the big plate on the side of the head is the squamous portion petrous portion: -endochondral bone with many centers of ossification and adding to it are membrane bones of the calvaria and it fuses together to give you one bone
Mastoid process is part of the temporal bone.
-full of mastoid air cells which are pneumatic spaces lined with respiratory type epithelium same that we will see in the frontal, sphenoid and maxillary sinuses
EAM= external auditory meatus
-is the ear canal -behind the mandibular fossa -lateral part of the canal , its walls are cartilaginous (lateral 1/3rd) -as you go farther in it is surrounded by the temporal bone (medial 2/3rd) -skin lining it has ceruminous glands and sebaceous glands which produce ear wax (cerumen) (mostly in the outer 2/3rd of the canal) -the ear canal does not go straight in, the ear canal is directed forward and downward otoscopy requires elevation of pinna and downward, forward look to see tympanic membrane
zygomatic process
bony prolongation forward from the temporal bone
Styloid process
is a process of the temporal bone (lateral view) -tip of the mastoid process is right behind the styloid process with the stylomastoid foramen right in between the two
medial side of the temporal bone
-comes to a point in the front and then from that point backwards there is a ridge which is the line of attachment of the tentorium cerebelli -exactly where the tentorium cerebelli attaches to the petrous bone that line there is a tiny venous sinus which is the superior petrosal sinus
IAM= internal auditory meatus
where CN VII and VIII along with labyrinthine artery (an internal auditory branch of the basilar artery) goes into the temporal bone
Why are infections of the mastoid air cells so common? Mastoiditis
-a sinus infection in your temporal bone -the sinuses all open up somewhere into the nasopharynx -the air cells, the air in here is exchanged with ambient air by a trip through the middle ear cavity and pharyngotympanic tube -The mastoid cells are a long way from getting fresh air from your nasopharynx.
Petrous temporal bone is surrounded by what dural venous sinuses?
-petrous bone is bounded by the superior petrosal sinus -cavernous sinus in front of the tip of the temporal bone -sigmoid sinus swings its way behind the petrous bone on its was to the jugular foramen -sigmoid sinus connects between the cavernous sinus and sigmoid sinus -inferior petrosal sinus is inferior of the temporal bone ; connects btw the cavernous sinus and jugular foramen; it is the alternative way to get blood from caver into internal jugular vein to get out of that region
Ear-embryologically
-ear develops from elements of multiple pharyngeal arches -because of that we will have multiple sensory nerves innervating the skin of these structures - ear: external ear, EAM, IAM, middle ear cavity
Sensory innervation of the pinna, ear canal, and tympanic
-skin of the external ear skin lining the ear canal and all the in to the outer surface of the tympanic membrane -all of those if you think of them as a unit there are sensory branches of trigeminal, facial, glossopharyngeal, and cervical nerve 2 innervating them Sensory innervation of the pinna, ear canal and tympanic cavity is supplied by branches of CN V3 (auriculotemporal nerve: pathway for fibers from otic ganglion to get to the parotid gland; innervates the auriculotemporal region of the ear), IX, X (at the area of the concha and tragus we have a little patch of vagus with smaller contributions from CN VII), and C2 (greater auricular and lesser occipital nerve which is C2-C3). -so CN V, VII, IX, C2 all give innervation to the skin overlying the ear The complex sensory innervation results from derivation of the pinna, canal and tympanic cavity from multiple branchial arches.