3 results match your criteria: "School of Medicine of Dijon[Affiliation]"

CT-scan imaging of iron marked chorda tympani nerve: anatomical study and educational perspectives.

Surg Radiol Anat

August 2011

Laboratory of Anatomy, INSERM U-887 Motricité-Plasticité, School of Medicine of Dijon, 7 Boulevard Jeanne d'Arc, 21000 Dijon, France.

The chorda tympani nerve (CTN) is the last collateral branch of the facial nerve in its third intraosseous portion just over the stylomastoid foramen. After a curved course against the medial aspect of the tympanum where it is likely to be injured in middle ear surgery, CTN reaches the lingual nerve in the infratemporal fossa. Knowledge of CTN topographic anatomy is not easily achieved by the students because of the deep location of this thin structure.

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Lingual nerve damage complicating oral surgery would sometimes require electrographic exploration. Nevertheless, direct recording of conduction in lingual nerve requires its puncture at the foramen ovale. This method is too dangerous to be practiced routinely in these diagnostic indications.

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High cervical transmasseteric anteroparotid approach for open reduction and internal fixation of condylar fracture.

J Oral Maxillofac Surg

January 2008

Faculty of Medicine, Department of Maxillofacial Surgery and Stomatology, Teaching Hospital of Dijon, Institute of Anatomy, INSERM ERIT-M 0207, School of Medicine of Dijon, Dijon, France.

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