Infratemporal fossa (110-123) Flashcards
What are the boundaries of the infratemporal fossa?;
Lateral- condylar process and ramus of the mandible bone. Medial- lateral pterygoid plate. Anterior- posterior border of the maxillary sinus. Posterior- styoid process . Roof- greater wing of the sphenoid bone. Floor- medial pterygoid muscle.
The infratemporal fossa can be said to have a wedge shape. It is located deep to the masseter muscle and zygomatic arch (to which the masseter attaches).
Name the muscles in the infratemporal fossa;
4 muscles of mastication- Lateral pterygoid, medial pterygoid, masseter, temporalsis.
Name the vessels in the infratemporal fossa;
Maxillary artery (branch of external carotid), Maxillary vein, Pterygoid venous plexus, Middle meningeal artery& vein
Name the nerves and ganglion in the infratemporal fossa;
Otic ganglion,
Mandibular nerve (CN V3) with sensory terminal branches (BAIL) -> Buccal, Auriculotemporal, Inferior alveloar and Lingual.
Chorda tympnai (sensory branch of facial nerve CN VII).
Name the main veins that drain the face;
Facial vein. Retromandibular vein.
How is the retromandibular vein formed?;
Maxillary vein and superficial temporal veins
How is the external jugular vein formed?;
Posterior auricular vein and retromandibular vein
Into where does the external jugular vein drain?;
Subclavian vein
What structures pass through the jugular foramen?;
3 nerves- Glossopharyngeal (CN IX), Vagus (CN X), Accessory (CN XI). 2 arteries- ascending occipital and pharygeal arteries. 1 vein- internal jugular (from sigmoid sinus).
How is the internal jugular vein formed?;
Unior of sigmoid sinus & inferior pterygoid sinus.
Describe the course of the accessory nerve;
2 components (cervical & extracrainial). Cervical (C1-5 neurones from upper spinal cord)- fibres coalesce and then ascends up through formen magnum. The nerve transverses the posterior cranial fossa and exits through jugular foramen.
Extracranial- descends along the internal carotid to reach the sternocleidomastodi muscles and then to trapezius muscle.
What does the accessory nerve supply?;
Sternocleidomastoid and trapezium
What structures pass through the foramen magnum;
Posteriorly (neurovascular)- medulla, meninges, vertebral arteries, anterior & posterior spinal arteries, the dural veins. Anteriorly (bones & ligaments- Tentorial membrane, apical ligament of dens, dens of axis (C2), atlas C1, crucial ligament of atlas
What are the characteristic features of a typical cervical vertbra?;
Small body, short pedicle, bifid spinous process