Cranial Bone Anatomy and Clinical Significance

8 décembre 2025

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1. Overview

  • The course covers the anatomy of the cranial and facial bones, focusing on the ethmoid, sphenoid, and temporal bones.
  • It details their location, structural parts, articulations, and clinical significance.
  • Key ideas follow the chronological development of each bone, emphasizing anatomical relationships and high-yield features.

2. Core Concepts & Key Elements

  • Ethmoid Bone: Unpaired, anterior skull base, part of neurocranium and viscerocranium; joins with frontal, nasal, sphenoid bones.
  • Ethmoid Bone Parts:
    • Cribriform plate: olfactory foramina, crista galli, separates nasal cavity from cranial cavity.
    • Perpendicular plate: divides nasal septum; attachment for falx cerebri.
    • Lateral masses (ethmoidal labyrinth): contain ethmoidal cells (sinuses), articulate with orbit, nasal cavity, and form conchae.
  • Sphenoid Bone: centrally located, 'butterfly-shaped'; forms part of skull base with multiple processes.
  • Sphenoid Structures:
    • Body: contains sphenoidal sinuses, sella turcica (hypophyseal fossa), optic grooves.
    • Lesser wings: delimit optic canal, articulate with frontal and ethmoid.
    • Greater wings: form temporal fossa, orbit, contain foramina rotundum, ovale, spinosum.
    • Pterygoid processes: medial (pterygoid hamulus), lateral plates, articulations with palatine and nasal bones.
  • Temporal Bone: paired, located laterally, protects hearing and balance organs, contains squamous, mastoid, petrous parts.
  • Temporal Bone Parts:
    • Squamous: attachment for temporalis, articulates with parietal bone.
    • Mastoid: contains mastoid cells, attachment for neck muscles.
    • Petrous: houses inner ear, internal acoustic meatus, carotid canal, jugular fossa.
  • Anatomical Relationships:
    • Bones articulate through sutures, processes, foramina, and fossae.
    • Critical foramina include optic canal, foramen rotundum/ovale/spinosum, jugular foramen, carotid canal.

3. High-Yield Facts

  • Olfactory nerves pass through: olfactory foramina in the cribriform plate.
  • Perpendicular plate of ethmoid: forms nasal septum; attachment for falx cerebri.
  • Sphenoid sinus: bilateral; separated by septum.
  • Sella turcica: houses the pituitary gland.
  • Foramina:
    • Optic canal: for optic nerve and ophthalmic artery.
    • Foramen rotundum: maxillary nerve (V2).
    • Foramen ovale: mandibular nerve (V3).
    • Foramen spinosum: middle meningeal vessels.
    • Jugular foramen: sigmoid sinus, glossopharyngeal, vagus nerves.
    • Carotid canal: internal carotid artery.
  • Temporal bone landmarks:
    • Zygomatic process: forms part of zygomatic arch.
    • Styloid process: attaches to stylohyoid.
    • Mastoid process: origin of SCM, contains mastoid cells.
    • Internal acoustic meatus: facial and vestibulocochlear nerves.
  • Muscle attachments:
    • Temporalis muscle: attaches to temporal fossa and line.
    • Pterygoid muscles: attach to pterygoid plates.

4. Summary Table

ConceptKey PointsNotes
Ethmoid boneUnpaired, anterior skull base, joins frontal, nasal, sphenoidContains cribriform, perpendicular plates, ethmoidal cells
Cribriform plateOlfactory foramina, hosts CN ISeparates cranial cavity from nasal cavity
Perpendicular plateDivides nasal cavities, attachment for falx cerebriAlso called vertical plate
Ethmoidal labyrinth (lateral masses)Contains ethmoidal cells, form conchaeArticulates with orbit and nasal cavity
Sphenoid boneCentral, butterfly-shaped, forms skull baseArticulates with frontal, occipital, parietal, temporal, ethmoid bones
Body of sphenoidHouses sphenoidal sinuses, sella turcica (pituitary)Contains chiasmatic groove, tuberculum sellae
Lesser wingsForm optic canal, anterior boundary of skull baseSupport the frontal lobe
Greater wingsForm temporal fossa, orbital surfaces, foraminaForamen rotundum, ovale, spinosum
Pterygoid processesMedial pterygoid hamulus, lateral platesAttach pterygomandibular ligament
Temporal boneLateral skull, protects auditory and vestibular organsParts: squamous, mastoid, petrous
Squamous partAttachment for temporalis muscleArticulates with parietal
Mastoid partContains mastoid cells, attachment pointsFor muscles: SCM, splenius
Petrous partHouses inner ear, internal acoustic meatus, carotid canalBorders with sphenoid and occipital
Foramina of temporal boneInternal acoustic, styloid foramen, carotid canalPassage points for nerves, vessels

5. Mini-Schema

Cranial & Facial Bones
 ├─ Ethmoid
 │   ├─ Cribriform plate: olfactory nerves
 │   └─ Perpendicular plate: nasal septum
 ├─ Sphenoid
 │   ├─ Body: sinuses, sella turcica
 │   ├─ Lesser wings: optic canal
 │   └─ Greater wings: foramen rotundum, spinosum, ovale
 └─ Temporal
     ├─ Squamous: temporalis attachment
     ├─ Mastoid: mastoid cells, SCM
     └─ Petrous: inner ear, carotid canal

6. Rapid-Review Bullets

  • Ethmoid bone is unpaired, located anteriorly at skull base.
  • Olfactory nerves pass through the cribriform foramina.
  • Perpendicular plate forms the nasal septum.
  • Ethmoidal cells contribute to the ethmoidal labyrinth.
  • Sella turcica contains the pituitary gland.
  • Foramina: rotundum (V2), ovale (V3), spinosum (middle meningeal), optic canal.
  • Temporal bone protects hearing and balance structures.
  • Mastoid process anchors neck muscles; contains mastoid air cells.
  • Petrous part houses cochlea and vestibular apparatus.
  • Internal acoustic meatus transmits CN VII and VIII.
  • Zygomatic process of temporal forms part of the zygomatic arch.
  • Foramina in sphenoid and temporal bones are landmarks for neurovascular passage.