copy and paste this google map to your website or blog!
Press copy button and paste into your blog or website.
(Please switch to 'HTML' mode when posting into your blog. Examples: WordPress Example, Blogger Example)
The Infratemporal Fossa - Borders - Contents - TeachMeAnatomy The roof of the infratemporal fossa, formed by the greater wing of the sphenoid bone, provides an important passage for the neurovascular structures transmitted through the foramen ovale and spinosum
Anatomy of the Infratemporal Fossa Lab 6 Once this is done, identify the lingual nerve and inferior alveolar nerve that emerge inferiorly from between the lateral pterygoid and medial pterygoid muscles
Anatomy of the infratemporal fossa - Osmosis It contains vital structures such as the maxillary artery and mandibular nerve The infratemporal fossa is an irregularly shaped space located deep and inferior to the zygomatic arch, deep to the ramus of the mandible, and posterior to the maxilla
Infratemporal fossa - Wikipedia It also contains important blood vessels such as the middle meningeal artery, the pterygoid plexus, and the retromandibular vein, and nerves such as the mandibular nerve (CN V 3) and its branches
Infratemporal fossa - anatomy. app The foramen ovale connects the infratemporal fossa with the middle cranial fossa It transmits the mandibular nerve (CN V3), lesser petrosal nerve, the accessory meningeal branch of the maxillary artery, and an emissary vein
Infratemporal fossa - Easy Anatomy 3D The infratemporal fossa contains the medial and lateral pterygoids, the maxillary artery, the superior posterior alveolar arteries, the mandibular vein, the pterygoid plexus, the mandibular nerve, and the branches of the superior posterior alveolar nerves
Infratemporal fossa and its nerves (mandibular nerve) Distribution : Postganglionic parasympathetic secretomotor and postganglionic sympathetic vasomotor fibres join the auriculotemporal nerve to supply the parotid gland