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Petrotympanic fissure

 
Wikipedia: Petrotympanic fissure
Bone: Petrotympanic fissure
Left temporal bone. Outer surface. (Petrotympanic fissure is labeled at left, fourth from top.)
The right membrana tympani with the hammer and the chorda tympani, viewed from within, from behind, and from above. (Glaserian fissure labeled at center left.)
Latin f. petrotympanica
Gray's subject #34 140

The petrotympanic fissure (AKA squamotympanic fissure) is a fissure in the temporal bone[1] that runs from the temporomandibular joint to the tympanic cavity.[2]

The mandibular fossa is bounded, in front, by the articular tubercle; behind, by the tympanic part of the bone, which separates it from the external acoustic meatus; it is divided into two parts by a narrow slit, the petrotympanic fissure.

It opens just above and in front of the ring of bone into which the tympanic membrane is inserted; in this situation it is a mere slit about 2 mm. in length. It lodges the anterior process and anterior ligament of the malleus, and gives passage to the anterior tympanic branch of the internal maxillary artery.

Contents

Eponym

It is also known as the "Glaserian fissure", after Johann Glaser.[3]

Base of the skull. Arrows indicate petrotympanic fissure.

Contents

The contents of the fissure include communications of cranial nerves VII and IX to the infratemporal fossa. A branch of cranial nerve VII, the chorda tympani, runs through the fissure to join with the lingual nerve providing special sensory (taste) innervation to the tongue. The tympanic nerve branches off of cranial nerve IX to pass through the fissure with the lesser petrosal nerve, which passes through the foramen ovale and joins V3 of the trigeminal nerve, synapses in the otic ganglion, to provide parasympathetic innervation to the parotid gland.

See also

References

  1. ^ Petrotympanic+fissure at eMedicine Dictionary
  2. ^ Eckerdal O (1991). "The petrotympanic fissure: a link connecting the tympanic cavity and the temporomandibular joint". Cranio 9 (1): 15–22. PMID 1843474. 
  3. ^ "Glaserian fissure". Medcyclopaedia. http://www.medcyclopaedia.com/library/topics/volume_vi_2/g/glaserian_fissure.aspx. Retrieved on 2008-03-07. 

External links

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 As such, some of the information contained herein may be outdated.


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