Infratemporal fossa and temporomandibular joint Flashcards

1
Q

Contents of infratemporal fossa

A
  • 4 muscles of mastication
  • Mandibular nerve (V3) and its branches
  • Otic ganglion
  • Chorda tympani
  • Maxillary artery and branches
  • Pterygoid plexus of veins
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2
Q

Osteology of infratemporal fossa

A
  • The infra temporal fossa is below the zygomatic arch
  • Superior boundary: greater wing of sphenoid, temporal bone, and zygomatic arch (zygomatic bone and temporal bone)
  • Anterior boundary: zygomatic bone
  • Posterior boundary: tempoal bone and styloid process
  • Lateral boundary: zygomatic arch
  • Medial boundary: maxilla and lateral pterygoid plate
  • Parts of the mandible are within the infratemporal fossa
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3
Q

Osteology of the temporal fossa

A
  • Above the zygomatic arch

- Includes the frontal, parietal, greater wind of sphenoid, and temporal bones

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4
Q

Osteology of the mandible

A
  • Body: where molars are, contains the mental foramen for mental nerve (branch of inferior alveolar nerve of V3)
  • Angle: roughly 90 degree turn of the mandible, connecting the ramus to the body
  • Coronoid process: spike-like process anterior to the mandibular condyle (one attachment for temporal is muscle)
  • Ramus: vertically running part of the mandible that contains the groove for mylohyoid nerve and the mandibular foramen (for inferior alveolar nerve), both on medial part of ramus
  • Mandibular condyle: head of the mandible that inserts into TMJ
  • Mental protuberance: most anterior part of mandible
  • Mental tubercles: the two lateral sides of the mental protuberance
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5
Q

Muscles of mastication 1

A
  • Masseter: attaches to the zygomatic arch and angle of the mandible
  • Functions in elevation of mandible and protrusion
  • Temporalis: attaches to the coronoid process from aponeurosis w/ occipitalis
  • Functions in elevation and retraction (horizontal fibers)
  • Lateral pterygoid: runs from greater wing of sphenoid and lateral wall of the lateral pterygoid plate to the articular disc and head of mandible
  • Functions in depression and protrusion
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6
Q

Muscles of mastication 2

A
  • Medial pterygoid: attaches to angle of mandible and medial wall of lateral pterygoid plate
  • Functions in elevation and protrusion
  • All of these muscles are innervated by branches of V3
  • Both medial and lateral pterygoids are responsible for lateral movement of mandible
  • The last 2 muscles of mastication are both innervated by mylohyoid nerve (branch of V3): mylohyoid and anterior belly of diagastric
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7
Q

Temporomandibular joint

A
  • Articulation of condyle of mandible w/ mandibular fossa and the articular tubercle (eminence) of temporal bone
  • Within the TMJ there is a lower and upper synovial space bordering both the condyle and the mandibular fossa/articular tubercle
  • Btwn the two synovial spaces there is an articular disc
  • Upper synovial space responsible for gliding action
  • Lower synovial space responsible for hinge action
  • Lateral pterygoid muscle opens mouth by pulling condyle onto articular tubercle, followed by hinging action of condyle on the tubercle in lower joint space
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8
Q

Dislocated jaw and TMJ d/o

A
  • Dislocated jaw due to trauma or opening mouth too wide
  • Condyles move anterior to articular tubercles and get caught there
  • Must push up on anterior part of body and down on posterior part of body of the mandible
  • TMJ d/o: pronounced joint noises associated w/ movement, pain upon palpation of muscles of TMJ, limited range of opening
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9
Q

Mandibular nerve in infratemporal fossa

A

-V3 has 4 vertical branches in infra temporal fossa and one horizontal branch
-Vertical branches from anterior to posterior (A BLIMP):
Buccal nerve, Lingual nerve, Inferior alveolar nerve, Mylohyoid nerve
-Horizontal branch of V3: auriculotemporal nerve
-Mylohyoid nerve branches off the inferior alveolar nerve and runs in the groove of the mylohyoid, while the inferior alveolar nerve enters the mandibular canal w/ the inferior alveolar artery

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10
Q

Components and innervation of V3 branches

A
  • Buccal nerve (only SS) innervates mucosa of cheek and outer skin of the cheek
  • Lingual nerve: SS to anterior 2/3rds of tongue, contains hitchhikers from VII via chord tympani (taste and para/pre)
  • Inferior alveolar nerve: SS to lower teeth and skin of the chin (via mental nerve out of the mental foramen)
  • Mylohyoid nerve: SM only to anterior belly of diagastric and mylohyoid muscles
  • Mylohyoid nerve arose from inferior alveolar, so if inferior alveolar is tagged before the branching of mylohyoid it will have SM and SS
  • Auriculotemporal nerve contains SS to skin of external ear/temple and hitchhikers from IX (para/post to parotid)
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11
Q

Hitchhikers onto V3 1

A
  • Para/pre from VII: cell bodies in superior salivatory nucleus (VII) run w/ VII thru internal auditory meatus and branch off in chord tympani w/in the middle ear
  • Taste fibers of VII have the same path to chord tympani
  • From the middle ear chord tympani reaches the infra temporal fossa and joins w/ the lingual nerve soon after it branches off of V3
  • The para/pre use lingual nerve to reach the submandibular ganglion than run to submandibular gland, some also jump back onto the lingual nerve to reach sublingual gland
  • Therefore depending on if the lingual nerve is tagger before or after the submandibular ganglion it will have either para/pre or para/post
  • The taste fibers run w/ lingual nerve all the way to the tongue and supply taste to anterior 2/3rds of tongue
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12
Q

Hitchhikers onto V3 2

A
  • Para/pre from IX that reach the parotid gland via auriculotemporal have cell bodies in the inferior salivatory nucleus
  • The axons run w/ IX thru the jugular foramen and then branch off IX to reach the middle ear as the tympanic nerve
  • Tympanic nerve forms the tympanic plexus over the promontory of the middle ear
  • This branch not only contains para/pre but also viscerosensory that will innervate all of the middle ear cavity
  • The para/pre continue thru the middle ear as the lesser petrosal nerve and exit the middle ear thru foramen ovale
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13
Q

Hitchhikers onto V3 3

A
  • Right after foramen ovale the para/pre synapses on the otic ganglion that resides next to V3
  • From the otic ganglion the para/post fibers join the auriculotemporal nerve which runs to the parotid gland and the para/post provides innervation there
  • After the gland the auriculotemporal nerve continues, but only w/ SS to skin of ear and temple
  • Therefore if the auriculotemporal nerve is tagged after the gland (cutaneous branch), it has only SS
  • But if it is tagged before the gland is has SS and para/post
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14
Q

Maxillary artery

A
  • One of the terminal branches of the ECA, which terminate in infratemporal fossa
  • The ECA terminates into the maxillary artery and the superficial temporal artery
  • The maxillary gives off 2 important branches in the fossa: inferior alveolar artery and middle meningeal artery
  • Inferior alveolar artery branches off inferiorly to run w/ inferior alveolar nerve thru mandibular foramen/canal
  • Middle meningeal artery branches superiorly to run w/in a circle made by auriculotemporal nerve (perpendicular to each other) and up into the skull to supply the dura
  • The three terminal branches of the maxillary artery: descending palatine, sphenopalatine, and infraorbital arteries
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