Absence of foramen spinosum and abnormal middle meningeal artery in cranial series.

Anthropol Anz

Institute of Experimental Morphology, Pathology and Anthropology with Museum, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Sofia, Bulgaria.

Published: July 2012

AI Article Synopsis

  • The middle meningeal artery in humans typically enters the skull through the foramen spinosum, while in great apes it may use other channels like the foramen ovale or petrosphenoid fissure.
  • In nonhuman primates, the anterior meningeal system is linked to the internal carotid artery's ophthalmic branch, often using the superior orbital fissure for connections.
  • In the study, the absence of foramen spinosum was identified in a small percentage of medieval skulls, suggesting atypical development of the middle meningeal artery, which likely originated from the ophthalmic artery rather than the typical pathway.

Article Abstract

In comparative and evolutionary aspects in humans, the middle meningeal artery enters the cranium through the foramen spinosum, whereas in great apes the middle meningeal artery can enter the cranium through foramen spinosum, through foramen ovale or through petrosphenoid fissure. Generally, in nonhuman primates the anterior meningeal system is associated with the ophthalmic branch of the internal carotid artery. The vessels joining the two systems pass through the additional channels: the superior orbital fissure or through the cranio-orbital foramen. In anatomically modern humans, the absence of foramen spinosum involves abnormal development and course of the middle meningeal artery and it is usually accompanied with replacement of the conventional middle meningeal artery with such, arising from the ophthalmic artery system. In these cases the middle meningeal artery most often enters the middle cranial fossa through the superior orbital fissure and rarely through the meningo-orbital foramen. All skulls, investigated in the present study, belonged to adult individuals of both sexes, conditionally grouped into three cranial series--contemporary male, medieval male, and medieval female series. The absence of foramen spinosum was established only among the medieval male and female series--in 1 (0.70%) male and in 1 (0.72%) female skull on the right side and in 3 (2.13%) female skulls on the left side. In 1 (0.72%) female skull, a small atypically located foramen spinosum was established on the right side. In all of the described cases, the intracranial meningeal grooves started from the lateral edge of the superior orbital fissure and probably reflect the ophthalmic origin of the middle meningeal artery.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1127/0003-5548/2012/0165DOI Listing

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