Week 1 Anatomy Lecture Notes 1
Week 1 Anatomy Lecture Notes 1
Week 1 Anatomy Lecture Notes 1
o Atlantooccipital joint
Functional classification - Ellipsoid/Condyloid joint
Bones of the viscerocranium ("facial skeleton")
Question 1: List the cranial bones that belong to both the neurocranium and the viscerocranium
(“facial skeleton”)
Ethmoid
Sphenoid
Sometimes hyoid?
Question 2: Name the cranial bones that have been labelled and classify them as belonging to either
the neurocranium or viscerocranium
1. Maxillae (viscerocranium)
2. Frontal (neurocranium)
3. Nasal bone (viscerocranium)
Cranial bones
Frontal
Parietal
Sphenoid
Temporal
Parts of sphenoid
Lesser wing
Greater wing
Body
Parts of sphenoid and temporal bones
Parts of sphenoid
o Pterygoid hamulus
o Lateral pterygoid plate
o Medial pterygoid plate
Parts of temporal
o Styloid process
o Petrous part
Infratemporal fossa
o Communicates with temporal fossa
Anatomical principles
A1 - An anatomical space is defined by boundaries and has openings for communication with
other regions of the body.
A4 - The functions of a space relate to the structures within it or passing through it.
Application of principle
Middle cranial fossa
o Anterior: lesser wing of sphenoid
o Posterior: petrous part of temporal bone
o Medially: body of sphenoid
o Laterally: temporal and parietal bones
o Lodges temporal lobe of cerebral hemisphere
Temporal fossa
o Superior: temporal lines
o Anterior: Frontal and zygomatic bones
o Inferior: Zygomatic arch
o Contains temporalis
Communications
Optic canal
o Associated with sphenoid bone
o Location: seen within the sphenoid bone
o Communications: middle cranial fossa to the orbit
o Structure traversing: e.g. Optic nerve
Jugular foramen
o Location: seen between the petrous part of temporal bone (anteriorly) and the
occipital bone (posteriorly)
o Communications: posterior cranial fossa and the neck
o Contains: Glossopharyngeal nerve (CNIX), vagus nerve (CNX), descending portion of
the spinal accessory nerve (CNXI), internal jugular vein
Foramen ovale
o Location: greater wing of sphenoid
o Communications: middle cranial fossa and the infratemporal fossa
o Contains: Mandibular division of the trigeminal nerve (CN V3), accessory meningeal
branch of maxillary artery, emissary vein (, lesser petrosal nerve)
Foramen spinosum
Posterior to foramen ovale
Location: posteromedial part of greater wing of sphenoid bone posterolateral to foramen
ovale
Communicates: middle cranial fossa and inferotemporal fossa?
Contains: Middle meningeal artery
Question 1: Describe how the dural partitions (falx cerebri and tentorium
cerebelli) are formed (with reference to particular layers of the
meninges).
They are formed by the inner meningeal layer reflecting away from the fixed periosteal dural layer
Question 2: What do you think is the function of the dural partitions?
To limit the rotational displacement of the brain.
Question 3: What is the relationship of the falx cerebri and the anterior and middle cranial fossae?
Question 4: What is the relationship of the tentorium cerebelli and the posterior cranial fossa?
Skull Sutures
Activity 2
Functional and applied clinical implications
Dural venous sinuses - clinical complications
Venous route allows all sinuses to connect
o No valves present*
o Retrograde flow
o Spread of infection
o Infection of meninges - meningitis
Great cerebral vein - why not to shake an older person's head
Venous rupture due to trauma - impact, tensile loading, rapid translator movement
Potential rupture of veins with trauma
o Bleeding in cranial cavity
o Compression of the brain
Injury to the dura. Does it hurt?
Activity 3:
Temporomandibular joint
TMJ: Articular surfaces and capsule
Temporomandibular joint
Consists of
o Mandibular condyle
o Mandibular eminence
o Mandibular fossa
TMJ structure
Histological classification - synovial
o Articular surfaces
Mandibular (=glenoid) fossa and eminence (vs articular tubercle)
Mandibular condyle (head)
Lined with fibrocartilage and proliferative tissue
Why line the articular surfaces with fibrocartilage rather than the usual hyaline cartilage?
o Hyaline cartilage is ...
o Fibrous cartilage is ...
TMJ ligament
Capsule
o Loose attachments above disk (to temporal bone)
o Tight attachments below disk (to mandible)
Ligaments
o Temporomandibular
Lateral - prevents lateral displacement
o Sphenomandibular
Medial
o Stylomandibular
Posterior
o All ligaments have common orientation: _____
Therefore common function is to prevent _________ movement of
_____________ caused by ___________
TMJ: Movements
TMJ function
Two joints must function together
Classification by shape
o Hinge (inferior cavity)
o Gliding (superior cavity)
o 'modified hinge' or 'hinge with movable sockets'
Movements possible
o Elevation and depression
o Protrusion (protraction) and retrusion (retraction)
o Side-to-side (latera deviation)
o Wide opening of mouth requires protrusion in upper cavity and depression in lower
cavity
May lead to dislocation anteriorly
Pterygoid muscles
Lateral pterygoid
o Origin
Lateral surface of lateral pterygoid plate (and sphenoid)
o Insertion
Neck of mandible and capsule/articular disk
Medial pterygoid
o Origin
Medial surface of lateral pterygoid plate (and maxilla)
o Insertion
Medial surface of angle of mandible
Accessory muscles
Assist with depression of mandible, opening of mouth
TMJ: Innervation
CNV3 - Trigeminal nerve
Nerve type: mixed
o Motor to muscles of mastication
o General sensation to anterior head
Cutaneous
Lower lip, chin
Sensory to deeper structures
Muscles of mastication and facial expression
Oral cavity
Mandible and lower teeth
TMJ
Referred pain
New principle
o P17: Nociceptive input carried by a particular branch of a particular nerve arising
from pathology in one organ or region of the body may be perceived by the brain as
coming from another organ or region of the body supplied by another branch of the
same parent nerve
Trigeminal nerve has a common sensory ganglion for all three divisions
o Pain may refer from maxillary sinuses or upper teeth (innervated by CNV2) to TMJ
(innervated by CNV3)
o TMJ pain may refer to teeth and jaw