enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Infratemporal fossa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infratemporal_fossa

    The infratemporal fossa is connected to other spaces in the skull. It is connected to the middle cranial fossa by the foramen ovale and the foramen spinosum. It is connected to the temporal fossa, which lies deep to zygomatic arch. It is connected to the pterygopalatine fossa through the pterygomaxillary fissure.

  3. Infratemporal space - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infratemporal_space

    The infratemporal space (also termed the infra-temporal space or the infra-temporal portion of the deep temporal space) [1] is a fascial space of the head and neck (sometimes also termed fascial spaces or tissue spaces). It is a potential space in the side of the head, and is paired on either side.

  4. Infratemporal crest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infratemporal_crest

    The lateral surface of the greater wing of the sphenoid is convex, and divided by a transverse ridge, the infratemporal crest, into two portions.. The superior or temporal portion, convex from above downward, concave from before backward, forms a part of the temporal fossa, and gives attachment to the Temporalis; the inferior or infratemporal, smaller in size and concave, enters into the ...

  5. Pterygomaxillary fissure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pterygomaxillary_fissure

    The pterygomaxillary fissure is a fissure of the human skull.It is vertical, and descends at right angles from the medial end of the inferior orbital fissure.It is a triangular interval, formed by the divergence of the maxilla from the pterygoid process of the sphenoid.

  6. Middle meningeal artery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Middle_meningeal_artery

    A head injury (e.g., from a road traffic accident or sports injury) is required to rupture the artery. Emergency treatment requires decompression of the hematoma, usually by craniotomy. Subdural bleeding is usually venous in nature, rather than arterial. Nevertheless, embolization of the middle meningeal artery (as a supplementary treatment to ...

  7. Inferior orbital fissure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inferior_orbital_fissure

    Left infratemporal fossa. Horizontal section of nasal and orbital cavities. Dissection showing origins of right ocular muscles, and nerves entering by the superior orbital fissure.

  8. Temporal fenestra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temporal_fenestra

    The infratemporal fenestra, also called the lateral temporal fenestra or lower temporal fenestra, is the lower of the two and is exposed primarily in lateral (side) view. Temporal fenestrae in relation to the other skull openings in the dinosaur Massospondylus , a type of diapsid .

  9. Lesser petrosal nerve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lesser_petrosal_nerve

    It runs across the floor of this fossa [2] along a groove oriented in the direction the foramen ovale and situated parallel and anterolateral to the groove for the greater petrosal nerve and its groove. [3]: 509 It exits the skull via canaliculus innominatus [4] and enters the infratemporal fossa. In the fossa, its fibres synapse at the otic ...