Skull Introduction & Neurocranium - Cranial Vault Chronicles
- Skull Divisions:
- Neurocranium: Braincase; 8 bones.
- Viscerocranium: Facial skeleton; forms face, orbits, nasal cavities, supports mastication.
- Neurocranial Bones:
- Frontal (1): Forehead; supraorbital foramen.
- Parietal (2): Sides/roof; temporal lines.
- Temporal (2): Lateral walls/base; squamous, petrous, mastoid, tympanic parts. Foramina: carotid canal, IAM, jugular foramen (part).
- Occipital (1): Posterior/base; foramen magnum, occipital condyles, EOP.
- Sphenoid (1): "Keystone"; wings (greater/lesser), pterygoid processes. Foramina: optic canal, SOF, rotundum, ovale, spinosum.
- Ethmoid (1): Anterior base; cribriform plate (olfactory foramina), crista galli.
- 📌 Mnemonic (Cranial Bones): "PEST OF" (Parietal, Ethmoid, Sphenoid, Temporal, Occipital, Frontal) - 6 types, 8 total.
- Sutures: Coronal, Sagittal, Lambdoid, Squamous.

⭐ Sphenoid: "keystone" of cranial floor; articulates with all other cranial bones.
Viscerocranium & Mandible - Facial Framework Facts

- Viscerocranium (Facial Skeleton): 14 bones. 📌 Mnemonic: "Virgil Can Not Make My Pet Zebra Laugh" (Vomer, Inferior Conchae, Nasal, Maxilla, Mandible, Palatine, Zygomatic, Lacrimal).
- Maxillae (2): Upper jaw; infraorbital foramen; forms part of orbit, nasal cavity, hard palate. Site of Le Fort fractures.
- Zygomatic (2): Cheekbones; forms zygomatic arch with temporal bone.
- Nasal (2): Bridge of nose.
- Lacrimal (2): Medial orbit wall; lacrimal fossa for lacrimal sac.
- Palatine (2): Posterior hard palate; part of nasal cavity & orbit.
- Inferior Nasal Conchae (2): Lateral walls of nasal cavity; scroll-like bones.
- Vomer (1): Forms posterior/inferior part of nasal septum.
- Mandible (1): Lower jaw; largest, strongest facial bone.
- Body: Mental foramen (mental nerve & vessels).
- Ramus: Condylar process (articulates at TMJ), coronoid process (temporalis muscle attachment).
- Mandibular foramen (inferior alveolar nerve & vessels).
⭐ The mental foramen, typically located inferior to the apex of the mandibular second premolar tooth, is a crucial landmark for administering mental nerve blocks for anesthesia of the lower lip and chin.
Skull Base, Foramina & Sutures - Cranial Communication Channels
- Cranial Fossae & Foramina:
- Anterior Cranial Fossa: Frontal lobes.
- Cribriform plate (CN I).
- Middle Cranial Fossa: Temporal lobes.
- Optic Canal (CN II, Ophthalmic a.)
- Superior Orbital Fissure (CN III, IV, V1, VI, Ophthalmic v.)
- Foramen Rotundum (CN V2)
- Foramen Ovale (CN V3, Acc. meningeal a.) 📌 OVALE: Otic ganglion, V3, Accessory meningeal a., Lesser petrosal n., Emissary v.
- Foramen Spinosum (Middle meningeal a. & v.)
- Posterior Cranial Fossa: Cerebellum, brainstem.
- Internal Acoustic Meatus (CN VII, VIII)
- Jugular Foramen (CN IX, X, XI, IJV)
- Hypoglossal Canal (CN XII)
- Foramen Magnum (Medulla, Vertebral aa., CN XI spinal roots)
- Anterior Cranial Fossa: Frontal lobes.

- Sutures & Fontanelles:
- Sutures: Coronal, Sagittal, Lambdoid. Pterion (weakest point).
- Fontanelles: Anterior (closes 18-24 months), Posterior (closes 2-3 months).
⭐ Pterion fracture (junction of 4 bones) can rupture the middle meningeal artery, causing epidural hematoma.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Pterion: Weakest skull point; fracture risks middle meningeal artery injury.
- Cribriform plate (ethmoid): Transmits CN I; fracture can cause CSF rhinorrhea, anosmia.
- Foramen magnum: Transmits spinal cord, vertebral arteries, CN XI (spinal root).
- Sella turcica (sphenoid): Protects the pituitary gland.
- Le Fort fractures: Key midface fracture patterns; Le Fort I involves maxillary detachment.
- Mandible: Largest, strongest facial bone; forms temporomandibular joint (TMJ).
- Nasal septum: Key components are vomer and perpendicular plate of ethmoid.
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