Head and Neck Development Flashcards

1
Q

Pharyngeal arches

A
  • 5 arches (1, 2, 3, 4, and 6) separated by a pharyngeal cleft on the outside (ectoderm) and a pharyngeal pouch on the inside (endoderm)
  • Each arch has an artery, a nerve, cartilage, and mesenchyme
  • Each pharyngeal nerve (a cranial nerve) is mixed- it has motor and sensory components
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2
Q

First pharyngeal arch

A
  • Has 2 subdivisions: the maxillary process (innervated by V2) and the mandibular process (V3)
  • The frontonasal process (FNP) is anterior midline of the first arch (but its own structure) and is innervated by V1 (opthalmic)
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3
Q

Innervation of arches 2, 3, 4, and 6

A
  • Arch 2 from VII
  • Arch 3 from IX
  • Both arches 4 and 6 from X
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4
Q

Carniofacial muscles

A
  • Derived from paraxial mesoderm, but not from somites
  • Maintain their early innervation pattern once it is established
  • Some migrate w/ the migrating arch, some do not
  • But can always trace the arch a muscle rose from by its innervation
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5
Q

Pharyngeal arch cartilage

A
  • 1st arch cartilage: template for formation of mandible and maxilla
  • 2nd arch cartilage: supporting elements for jaw
  • 3rd-6th arch cartilage: supporting elements for neck and larynx
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6
Q

Pharyngeal mesenchyme

A
  • Mesoderm and neural crest origin
  • Mesoderm is source of cranial vascular endothelium and striated muscle
  • Neural crest is the source of the dura, most of the vascular smooth muscle
  • Cranial bones (and vascular smooth muscle) come from both
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7
Q

Formation of palate

A
  • Mandibular processes fuse in the midline
  • Maxillary processes do not fuse at first, but are initially separated by the distal end of the FNP- intermaxillary segment (FNP is origin of philtrum of upper lip)
  • FNP forms the primary palate (anterior 4 incisors)
  • The palatal shelves from the maxillary processes form the secondary palate
  • The primary palate and the anterior portion of the secondary palate become ossified to form the hard palate
  • The remaining non-ossified portion is the soft palate
  • Cleft palate: failure in fusion btwn the palatal shelves
  • Cleft lip: failure in fusion of intermaxillary segment w/ either or both maxillary processes
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8
Q

Formation of nasal cavity

A
  • First forms by invagination from the surface ectoderm
  • Innervated by CN V
  • Nasal septum grows down the roof of the cavity and fuses w/ the superior side of the palate to divide the cavity in 2
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9
Q

Formation and innervation of the oral cavity

A
  • Oropharyngeal membrane is the only location of a direct contact btwn ectoderm and endoderm (no mesoderm btwn)
  • This transition of ectoderm to endoderm lies w/in the oral cavity, anterior to the 1st pouch
  • This is also the transition of sensory innervation from CN V (ectoderm) to CN IX (endoderm)
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10
Q

Formation and innervation of the tongue

A
  • Anterior 2/3 of the tongue forms from tongue buds derived from the 1st arch (ectodermal, CN V)
  • The 3rd arch displaces the 2nd arch to the outside, and then creates the posterior 1/3 of the tongue (endodermal, CN IX)
  • The very posterior end of the tongue derived from the 4th arch (endodermal, CN X)
  • These nerves are only for somatosensory axons, special sensory taste axons run through slightly different pathways
  • Special sensory taste in the anterior 2/3 of the tongue is from CN VII (2nd arch)
  • Special sensory taste in posterior 1/3 is the same as somatosensory (CN IX and CN X, from arch 3 and 4 respectively)
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11
Q

Muscles of the tongue

A
  • Derived from the anterior-most (occipital) cerivcal somites, which migrate into the tongue (not pharyngeal muscles- not from pharyngeal arches)
  • Tongue muscles are innervated by CN XII prior to migration and carry the innervation w/ them
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12
Q

Development of the ear 1

A
  • External ear (auricle) forms from 3 pairs of swellings outside the 1st (mandibular) and 2nd arches
  • Inner ear is derived from surface ectoderm called otic placode, which buds off and moves inward (now otic vesicle)
  • Otic placode originates btwn arches 2 and 3 and thus is not pharyngeal
  • The otic vesicle acquired CN VIII innervation, corresponding to its position btwn arches 2 and 3 (which are innervated by CN VII and IX, respectively)
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13
Q

Development of the ear 2

A
  • External auditory meatus is derived from the 1st pharyngeal cleft (ectoderm)
  • The tympanic cavity and auditory tube and derived from the 1st pharyngeal pouch (endoderm)
  • Ear drum forms at the interface of the 1st pouch and the 1st cleft, so it has both ectodermal (V3) and endodermal (IX) innervation
  • Not related to oropharyngeal membrane, since the eardrum does contain mesoderm
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14
Q

Development of the thyroid

A
  • Forms from the dorsal surface of what will become the tongue, just behind the junction of the 1st and 3rd arches (thus is endodermal)
  • It descends through the tongue and migrates to straddle the larynx
  • The connection to the dorsal surface of the tongue is the thyroglossal duct, which atrophies as the thyroid reaches the larynx
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15
Q

Fate of pharyngeal pouches and clefts

A
  • 1st pouch and cleft are involved in ear development
  • All other clefts are irrelevant
  • 2nd pouch-> palatine tonsils
  • 3rd pouch-> inferior parathyroids and thymus
  • 4th pouch-> superior parathyroids and ultimobranchial bodies
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