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  2. Pharyngobasilar fascia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pharyngobasilar_fascia

    [citation needed] It is formed as a thickening of the pharyngeal mucosa superior to the superior pharyngeal constrictor muscle. It attaches to the basilar part of occipital bone, the petrous part of the temporal bone (medial to the pharyngotympanic tube), the (posterior border of the) medial pterygoid plate, and the pterygomandibular raphe. It ...

  3. Buccopharyngeal fascia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buccopharyngeal_fascia

    The buccopharyngeal fascia envelops the superior pharyngeal constrictor muscles. [ 4 ] [ 1 ] It extends anteriorly from the constrictor pharyngis superior [ 4 ] over the pterygomandibular raphe to cover the buccinator muscle [ 1 ] (though another source describes it as continuous with the fascia covering the buccinator muscle).

  4. Palatopharyngeal arch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palatopharyngeal_arch

    The palatopharyngeal arch (pharyngopalatine arch, posterior pillar of fauces) is larger and projects further toward the middle line than the palatoglossal arch; it runs downward, lateralward, and backward to the side of the pharynx, and is formed by the projection of the palatopharyngeal muscle, covered by mucous membrane.

  5. Pharyngeal muscles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pharyngeal_muscles

    The pharyngeal muscles are a group of muscles that form the pharynx, which is posterior to the oral cavity, determining the shape of its lumen, and affecting its sound properties as the primary resonating cavity. The pharyngeal muscles (involuntary skeletal) push food into the esophagus.

  6. Pharyngeal raphe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pharyngeal_raphe

    The pharyngeal raphe is a raphe that serves as the posterior attachment for several of the pharyngeal constrictors (thyropharyngeal part of the inferior pharyngeal constrictor muscle, middle pharyngeal constrictor muscle, superior pharyngeal constrictor muscle). [1] [2] Two sides of the pharyngeal wall are joined posteriorly in the midline by ...

  7. Superior pharyngeal constrictor muscle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superior_pharyngeal...

    The interval between the upper border of the muscle and the base of the skull is closed by the pharyngeal aponeurosis, and is known as the sinus of Morgagni. [2] There is an interval between superior pharyngeal constrictor and middle pharyngeal constrictor, this space contains glossopharyngeal nerve, lingual nerve and the stylopharyngeus muscle ...

  8. Retropharyngeal space - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Retropharyngeal_space

    Superiorly, the retropharyngeal space terminates at the base of the skull (more specifically, at the clivus [2]). [1] [5] Inferiorly, the true RPS terminates at a variable level along the upper thoracic spine with the fusion of alar fascia and visceral fascia; [1] sources either give the inferior termination of the true RPS as occurring at approximately the vertebral level of T4 [2] or at a ...

  9. Palatopharyngeus muscle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palatopharyngeus_muscle

    Passing laterally and downward behind the palatine tonsil, the palatopharyngeus joins the stylopharyngeus and is inserted with that muscle into the posterior border of the thyroid cartilage, some of its fibers being lost on the side of the pharynx and others passing across the middle line posteriorly to decussate with the muscle of the opposite ...