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Suprahyoid muscle originating from the mandible. It helps to raise the tongue and lower the mandible for mastication and swallowing and also forms the floor of the mouth.
| Dental Dictionary: mylohyoid muscle |
Suprahyoid muscle originating from the mandible. It helps to raise the tongue and lower the mandible for mastication and swallowing and also forms the floor of the mouth.
| 5min Related Video: Mylohyoid muscle |
| Medical Dictionary: mylohyoid muscle |
A muscle with origin from the mylohyoid line of the mandible, with insertion into the upper border of the hyoid bone and the raphe separating the muscle from its fellow, with nerve supply from the mylohyoid nerve, and whose action elevates the floor of the mouth and tongue and depresses the jaw when the hyoid is fixed.
| Wikipedia: Mylohyoid muscle |
| Mylohyoid muscle | |
|---|---|
| Muscles of the neck. Anterior view. Mylohyoid muscle in purple | |
| Front view of neck. (Mylohyoideus labeled at right, second from top.) | |
| Latin | musculus mylohyoideus |
| Gray's | subject #112 393 |
| Origin | Mylohyoid line (mandible) |
| Insertion | body of hyoid bone and median raphe |
| Artery | mylohyoid branch of inferior alveolar artery |
| Nerve | mylohyoid nerve, from inferior alveolar branch of mandibular nerve [V3] |
| Actions | Raises oral cavity floor, elevates hyoid, depresses mandible |
The mylohyoid muscle is a muscle running from the mandible to the hyoid bone, forming the floor of the oral cavity. These muscles are mesodermal in origin.
Contents |
The mylohyoid muscle is flat and triangular, and is situated immediately above the anterior belly of the digastric muscle. It forms, with its fellow of the opposite side, a muscular floor for the cavity of the mouth.
It arises from the whole length of the mylohyoid line of the mandible, extending from the symphysis in front to the last molar tooth behind. The posterior fibers pass inferomedially to insert into the body of the hyoid bone. It thus belongs to the suprahyoid muscles.
The middle and anterior fibers are inserted into a median fibrous raphé extending from the symphysis menti to the hyoid bone, where they joint at an angle with the fibers of the opposite muscle. This median raphé is sometimes absent; the fibers of the two muscles are then continuous.
The mylohyoid muscle is along with the anterior belly of the digastric muscle, is innervated by the mylohyoid nerve,it is also the mandibular division of the trigeminal nerve.
It may be united to or replaced by the anterior belly of the digastric muscle; accessory slips to other hyoid muscles are frequent.
This article was originally based on an entry from a public domain edition of Gray's Anatomy. As such, some of the information contained herein may be outdated.
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