Oct9 M2-Anatomy - Cranial Cavity - Notes Flashcards
3 levels, shelves, for the brain in the cranial cavity
- anterior fossa (shelf for frontal lobe)
- middle fossa (shelf for temporal lobe)
- posterior fossa (shelf for cerebellum)
why laceration of the scalp could lead to profuse bleeding and spreading of infection into dural venous sinuses
EMISSARY veins (that’s the name) comm between scalp, from under skin and fat (CT deep to skin containing LOT of blood vessels) through skull to dural venous sinus (infection can travel this way)
big vessel seen on top of dura mater
middle meningeal artery (imp for trauma and surgery)
what meninges have to remove to see brain (sulci and gyri)
dura and arachnoid (if leave arachnoid, don’t see well)
landmark of the middle meningeal a (where is it)
- is at the pterion on the temporal skull. a place where 4 bones fuse so bone there fragile in fractures so prob for this artery
- imprint of this artery on the inside of the skull bc of its high P
pterion location
1 finger width post and 2 fingers width sup to top of the orbit
importance of the dural projections (inner meningeal layer of dura leaves the outer periosteal)
hold the brain in the cranial cavity so it has to follow the head movement
2 main projections
- between two hemispheres (falx cerebri)
- between temporal lobes and cerebellum (tentorium cerebelli)
important dural venous sinuses (look like veins) in the brain
- superior sagittal sinus (related to falx cerebri)
- inferior sagittal sinus (related to falx cerebri bottom)
- transverse sinus (superficial one (like sup sagittal) related to the tentorium cerebelli)
- straight sinus (travelling from the intersection of the transverse sinus and superior sagittal sinus in the back, towards the front of the brain and fuses with inf. sagittal sinus)
straight sinus path
- from intersection of sup sagitt and transverse in the back
- horizontally forward a bit
- then joinds the inf. sagittal sinus
- inf. sagittal sinus arches (like shape of the head) to the front
where does the dural venous blood from dural venous sinuses in the brain drain into internal jugular vv
- most imp is the transverse sinuses
- they travel forward laterally to form the internal jugular vv
veins other than in the cranial cavity that partially drain into the dural venous sinuses
- ophthalmic v is continuous with the cavernous sinus in the back and is continuous with the facial v in the front
- the facial v drains into the internal jugular v inferiorly (below level of the brain)
- serve as a rescue path for venous blood in case of increased ICP to avoid increased ICP as much as possible*
where cavernous sinus drains (note: ophthalmic v drains in it)
in a collateral** (is the important bypass), which then drains in the transverse sinus. like that on each side
imp charact of ophthalmic v + facial v
all have no valves, nothing making the blood flow unidirectional
danger triangle in the face
triangle between middle of eyebrows and sides of the mouth, including the nose
-the two sides of the triangle (between edges of mouth and in between eyebrows) delineate the facial vv