Chapter 11: Joints of the Skull
Fetal Skull
Bones are not completely ossified at birth
Hinge movements of TMJ
-Depression: inferior movement of the mandible (open mouth) -Elevation: superior movement of the mandible (close mouth)
Anterior fontanelle
-Largest fontanelle located at the junction of the coronal and sagittal sutures. -In adults, this lies at the location of the bregma. - in babies called the "soft spot"
Planar movements of the TMJ
-Protraction: anterior movement of the mandible in a horizontal plane -Retraction: posterior movement of the mandible in a horizontal plane -Lateral movement: side-to-side movement (grinding)
Skull Sutures: classification & bony surfaces
-fibrous joints (suture in type), no ligaments or movement -sagittal suture -frontal (coronal) suture -lambdoid suture -squamous suture
Temporomandibular joint (TMJ): classification
-synovial joint, combined hinge and plane
Physician's use the anterior fontanelle to determine:
1. Position of fetal head in utero 2. The development of the skull (becomes bony at 2 years of age, unlike the other fontanelles which ossify within a few months) 3. Extent of pathological intracranial pressure
Two compartments of the joint cavity
1. Superior compartment: located between the articular disc and the mandibular fossa 2. Inferior compartment: located between the articular disc and mandible
Two types of movemenets at the TMJ
Hinge movements & planar movements
Bony surfaces of TMJ
Mandibular fossa of the temporal bone Head (condyloid process) of the mandible
Fontanelles
Six major unossified, membranous areas between the cranial bones
Anterolateral fontanelles (sphenoid fontanelles)
Small irregular fontanelles located at the junction of the frontal, parietal, sphenoid, and temporal bones
Posterolateral fontalles (mastoid fontanelles)
Small irregular fontanelles located at the junction of the occipital, parietal, and temporal bones
Sagittal suture
The articulation of the two parietal bones in the median plane of the skull
Posterior fontanelle
Triangular; located at the junction of the lambdoid and sagittal sutures. -in adults, lies at the location of the lambda
Articular disc
prominent intraarticular ligament of TMJ -oval plate of fibroud tissue, sometimes contains patches of fibrocartilage -circumference of the disc attaches to the articular capsule -divides the joint cavity into two separate compartments
squamous suture
the articulation of the parietal and temporal bones
lambdoid suture
the articulation of the parietal bones with the occipital bone
frontal (coronal) suture
the articulation of the partietal bones with the frontal lobe