Fiche de révision : Crani facial Bones

1. 📌 Essentials

  • The ethmoid bone is a quadrangular unpaired bone forming part of the anterior skull, nasal cavity, and orbits.
  • The sphenoid bone is a butterfly-shaped bone at the skull base, articulating with many cranial bones.
  • The temporal bone forms the sides and base of the skull, protecting the ear and neurovascular structures.
  • All three bones contribute to the cranial base, medial orbital wall, and nasal septum.
  • The cribriform plate of the ethmoid transmits olfactory nerves.
  • The sella turcica houses the pituitary gland (sphenoid).
  • The mastoid process offers attachment for neck muscles (temporal).
  • The greater wings of sphenoid create part of the skull's lateral and superior surfaces.
  • The petrous portion of temporal bone encloses inner ear structures.
  • Common clinical relevance: fractures involving these bones can damage the brain, nerves, or vascular structures.

2. 🧩 Key Structures & Components

  • Ethmoid bone: cribriform plate, perpendicular plate, lateral masses, ethmoidal cells, superior and middle conchae.
  • Sphenoid bone: body, lesser wings, greater wings, pterygoid processes, sella turcica, optical foramina.
  • Temporal bone: squamous part, mastoid portion, petrous part, styloid process, zygomatic process, mandibular fossa.

3. 🔬 Functions, Mechanisms & Relationships

  • Ethmoid: supports nasal septum, forms medial orbital walls, transmits olfactory nerves.
  • Sphenoid: central skull base, forms part of the cranial cavity and eye socket, contains air sinuses, provides attachment for muscles.
  • Temporal: protects auditory structures, forms part of the skull base, facilitates attachment of mastoid and neck muscles.
  • Relationships:
    • Ethmoid joins with frontal, nasal, sphenoid bones.
    • Sphenoid joins with frontal, parietal, occipital, temporal bones.
    • Temporal bones articulate with parietal, occipital, sphenoid, zygomatic, and mandible.
  • Mechanisms:
    • Olfactory nerves pass through cribriform plate to the olfactory bulbs.
    • Sphenoid processes: attachments for dura mater, muscles, ligaments.
    • Temporal mastoid process serves as muscle and ligament attachment points.

4. ⚖️ Comparative Summary Table

ItemKey FeaturesNotes / Differences
EthmoidUnpaired, quadrangular, cribriform, perpendicular plateCribriform transmits olfactory nerves, forms nasal septum
SphenoidButterfly-shaped, central skull baseContains sphenoidal sinuses, sella turcica, optic canals
TemporalPaired, at skull sides, includes squamous, petrous, mastoidContains structures for hearing, balance, attachment points

5. 🗂️ Hierarchical Diagram

Skull Base
 ├─ Ethmoid Bone
 │    ├─ Cribriform Plate
 │    ├─ Perpendicular Plate
 │    └─ Lateral Masses
 ├─ Sphenoid Bone
 │    ├─ Body
 │    ├─ Lesser Wings
 │    └─ Greater Wings
 └─ Temporal Bones
      ├─ Squamous Part
      ├─ Mastoid Part
      └─ Petrous Part

6. ⚠️ High-Yield Pitfalls & Confusions

  • Confusing cribriform plate with perpendicular plate; they are distinct parts of ethmoid.
  • Mistaking lesser wings (supporting orbital apex) with greater wings (forming skull base and lateral wall).
  • Overlooking the jugum sphenoidale as part of the sphenoid body.
  • Confusing styloid process attachment points with other small projections.
  • Assuming all sphenoid processes are muscular attachments; some are bony landmarks.
  • Misidentifying the mastoid process as part of the temporal squama only.
  • Ignoring the significance of foramen in sphenoid (rotundum, ovale, spinosum) in nerve passage.
  • Overlooking the petrous part's orientation and its relation to the inner ear.

7. ✅ Final Exam Checklist

  • Know the location and main parts of the ethmoid, sphenoid, and temporal bones.
  • Be able to identify and describe the cribriform plate, sella turcica, mastoid process, and styloid process.
  • Understand the articulations between these bones and adjacent skull bones.
  • Remember the foramina for nerves and vessels (e.g., optic, rotundum, ovale, spinosum).
  • Recognize the functions of ethmoid air cells and sphenoid sinuses.
  • Know the attachments of muscles: temporalis, pterygoids, and ligaments.
  • Correlate the bones with clinical relevance like fractures causing nerve or vessel injury.
  • Memorize the spatial relationships within the skull base.
  • Be familiar with the contributions of these bones to the cranial cavity, orbit, and nasal cavity.
  • Understand the development (endochondral ossification) of temporal structures.
  • Identify anatomical landmarks on diagrams and in morphological descriptions.

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1. Which feature of the ethmoid bone enables the passage of the olfactory nerves?

2. Which bone is responsible for transmitting the olfactory nerves?

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Ethmoid bone — localization?

Unpaired, anterior skull base, joins frontal, nasal, sphenoid bones.

Ethmoid — role?

Supports nasal septum, transmits olfactory nerves.

Ethmoid bone — parts?

Cribriform plate, perpendicular plate, lateral masses, conchae.

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