Workbook questions 2 - Innervation Flashcards
How is the neonatal skull different from that of the adult?
- Open sutures and fontanelles to allow moulding during birth 2 frontal bones normally fuse, but occasionally persist in the adult (metopic suture)
- Bony proportions different
– facial skeleton small at birth - Alveolar processes and paranasal sinuses rudimentary at birth
What consequence during childbirth may result from the relative small size of the foetal mastoid process?
The mastoid air cells do not develop until the 2nd or 3rd year – the small mastoid process leaves the facial nerve exposed as it exits from the stylomastoid foramen. A superficially placed nerve is likely to be injured during forceps delivery.
What is the “antrum” in the facial skeleton?
The word “antrum” is frequently used to describe the maxillary air sinus which is located in the body of the maxilla.
What is the “antrum” in the facial skeleton?
The word “antrum” is frequently used to describe the maxillary air sinus which is located in the body of the maxilla.
What is Paget’s disease and what is its effect on the skull?
Paget’s disease, also known as ‘ostetis deformans’ affects people past middle age. The bones most frequently involved are the pelvis, femora, vertebrae and skull. There is a rapid, irregular and exaggerated resorption and replacement of bone, causing thickening, swelling and increased vascularity, often with severe pain.
When the skull is affected, it slowly enlarges, as do the jaws – the maxilla more frequently than the mandible that necessitates adjustments to dentures. The teeth may become displaced and become fused with bone, complicating extractions. Oral surgery may become complicated by severe haemorrhage.
What is the ligamentum nuchae?
Ligamentum nuchae, also called the nuchal ligament, is found in the cervical region and is a continuation of the interspinous and supraspinous ligaments of the thoracic and lumbar vertebrae. It is a thickened fibroelastic tissue that attaches to the external occipital protuberance and the posterior border of the foramen magnum to the spinous processes of the cervical vertebrae. It preserves the normal curvature of the cervical spine.
Why are cervical vertebrae prone to dislocation in whiplash injuries?
The cervical vertebrae are prone to dislocation due to the almost horizontal alignment of the articular facets between adjoining vertebrae.
Why might posterior prolapse of intervertebral disc between C2 and C3 prove fatal?
The prolapse may cause pressure on the spinal cord above the phrenic nerve outflow of C3, C4 and C5. If this happens suddenly, respiration will cease.
Which are the most important muscles of facial expression?
The sphincters of the face (i.e. orbicularis oris and two orbiculares oculi). Not only do they contribute to expression but they are also the anchors into which the majority of the other small muscles attach. Orbicularis oculi is the protector of the cornea and is therefore necessary for normal vision. Loss of orbicularis oris may lead to a mouth which drools uncontrollably, and is commonly seen in facial nerve palsy or Bell’s palsy).
Which nerves provide sensory innervation for the face and the neck?
The sensory innervation of the face and the neck is via the cutaneous branches of the cervical nerves from the cervical plexus (for the neck and extending upwards onto the face – parotid region; area overlying the angle of the mandible) and the cutaneous branches of the three divisions (ophthalmic, maxillary and mandibular) of the trigeminal nerve. CN
What is the Pterion?
It is an anatomical landmark in the osteology of the cranium whereby the temporal bone, sphenoid bone, parietal bone and frontal bone meet to form an H-shaped joint complex
What is clinical the Importance of the pterion in high energy impacts to the temporal region?
•The pterion is not only a structurally weak joint in itself but the temporal bone in the region of the pterion is very thin and closely associated with the anterior branch of the middle meningeal artery which is susceptible to puncture in “depression” fractures of this region
Explain what is meant by an “extradural haematoma”?
Separation of the periosteal layer of the dura mater from the cranium creates a
space into which blood from a torn meningeal vessel accumulates giving rise to an
extradural haematoma. In normal situation, no space exists between the two layers
(periosteal and meningeal) of the dura mater except in the region of the dural
venous sinuses where the two layers are separate.
Which blood vessel would have been severed as a result of being struck in the temporal area of the head?
The middle meningeal artery (or precisely its anterior branch) is the most likely blood vessel to have been severed as a result of this injury.
The middle meningeal artery, which is a branch of the maxillary artery, enters the cranial cavity via the Foramen spinosum and lies just behind the pterion. The hit would fracture the thin bones forming the pterion, severing the anterior branch of the middle meningeal artery.
Why should a fracture of the pterion constitute a medical emergency?
Fracture of the pterion would most likely lead to puncture of the middle meningeal artery, leading to an extradural hematoma, which if not evacuated would lead to sigificant brain injury if not death