🧠 Head, Neck & Facial Anatomy
Cranial nerve exit foramina, triangles of the neck, deep cervical fascia and the danger space — the anatomical foundation for all ENT surgery.
Cranial Nerve Exit Foramina
For MRCS ENT, you must know the exit foramina of the skull base, the entire course of CN VII through the petrous bone, and the clinical consequences of each nerve’s injury. The trigeminal divisions and facial nerve are the highest-yield topics.
🧠 CN V — “Standing Room Only” (SOF, FR, FO)
V1 (Ophthalmic) → Superior Orbital Fissure
V2 (Maxillary) → Foramen Rotundum
V3 (Mandibular) → Foramen Ovale
Also through the SOF: CN III, IV, VI, and the sympathetic fibres — all supply the orbit
V2 (Maxillary) → Foramen Rotundum
V3 (Mandibular) → Foramen Ovale
Also through the SOF: CN III, IV, VI, and the sympathetic fibres — all supply the orbit
CN V — Trigeminal Nerve Divisions
V1
Ophthalmic
ExitSuperior Orbital Fissure
BranchesLacrimal, Frontal (supraorbital, supratrochlear), Nasociliary
SuppliesForehead, scalp to vertex, upper eyelid, cornea (afferent limb of corneal reflex), nose bridge, frontal/ethmoid/sphenoid sinuses
ClinicalHerpes Zoster ophthalmicus (V1 distribution) — vesicles on forehead + tip of nose (Hutchinson’s sign) = nasociliary involvement → risk of keratitis
V2
Maxillary
ExitForamen Rotundum → pterygopalatine fossa → infraorbital foramen
BranchesInfraorbital, zygomatic, posterior superior alveolar, palatine nerves, nasal branches
SuppliesCheek, lower eyelid, lateral nose, upper lip, upper teeth and gum, hard/soft palate, maxillary sinus
ClinicalLe Fort II/III fractures → infraorbital nerve injury → cheek numbness. Maxillary sinusitis can cause V2 pain (toothache-like).
V3
Mandibular
ExitForamen Ovale
BranchesAuriculotemporal, lingual, inferior alveolar (→ mental nerve), buccal nerve; motor to muscles of mastication
SuppliesLower lip/chin (mental), lower teeth/gum, anterior 2/3 tongue (general sensation via lingual), ear (auriculotemporal), TMJ. Motor: temporalis, masseter, pterygoids, anterior digastric, mylohyoid
ClinicalMandibular fracture → mental nerve injury → numb chin (numb chin sign also: malignancy of mandible). Auriculotemporal nerve → Frey’s syndrome after parotidectomy. Chorda tympani joins lingual nerve in infratemporal fossa.
CN VII — The Facial Nerve
The facial nerve has the most complex intracranial and extracranial course of any cranial nerve — you must know every branch it gives off and the clinical consequence of injury at each point.
Course of CN VII Through the Petrous Bone
| Segment | Location | Branch Given Off | Function of Branch |
|---|---|---|---|
| Meatal segment | Internal acoustic meatus (with CN VIII) | None | — |
| Labyrinthine segment | Petrous bone; site of Geniculate Ganglion | Greater Petrosal Nerve | Parasympathetic to lacrimal gland (via pterygopalatine ganglion) — lacrimation. Injury here → dry eye. |
| Tympanic (horizontal) segment | Medial wall of middle ear (above oval window) | Nerve to Stapedius | Stapedius reflex — dampens loud sounds. Injury → hyperacusis. |
| Mastoid (vertical) segment | Descends in mastoid | Chorda Tympani | Taste anterior 2/3 tongue (via lingual nerve, V3) + parasympathetic to submandibular/sublingual glands. Injury → loss of taste anterior tongue + dry mouth. |
| Stylomastoid foramen | Exit point from skull base | Posterior auricular nerve, nerve to posterior digastric and stylohyoid | Motor to posterior auricular muscles |
| Parotid gland | Divides into superior (temporofacial) and inferior (cervicofacial) divisions | 5 terminal branches | See below — motor to muscles of facial expression |
🧠 CN VII Terminal Branches — “Ten Zebras Bit My Cat”
Temporal — frontalis, orbicularis oculi (upper), corrugator
Zygomatic — orbicularis oculi (lower), zygomaticus
Buccal — buccinator, orbicularis oris, upper lip
Marginal Mandibular — depressors of lower lip and chin. Most commonly injured in surgery (thin, unprotected, often single branch)
Cervical — platysma
Zygomatic — orbicularis oculi (lower), zygomaticus
Buccal — buccinator, orbicularis oris, upper lip
Marginal Mandibular — depressors of lower lip and chin. Most commonly injured in surgery (thin, unprotected, often single branch)
Cervical — platysma
Localising a Facial Nerve Lesion
- Dry eye (lacrimation lost) + hyperacusis + taste loss + facial palsy → lesion at or proximal to geniculate ganglion (e.g., Ramsay Hunt, acoustic neuroma, petrous fracture)
- Hyperacusis + taste loss + facial palsy, but lacrimation intact → lesion between geniculate ganglion and nerve to stapedius
- Taste loss + facial palsy, lacrimation and stapedius reflex intact → lesion between stapedius branch and chorda tympani (mid-mastoid)
- Facial palsy only → distal to stylomastoid foramen (e.g., parotid tumour, surgery, Bell’s palsy at stylomastoid)
- Bell’s Palsy: LMN (lower motor neuron) — entire face affected including forehead. UMN lesion spares forehead (bilateral cortical representation).
Other High-Yield Cranial Nerves for ENT
XI
Spinal Accessory
ExitJugular foramen (with IX, X)
CourseEnters posterior triangle of neck — very superficial, vulnerable
SupplySternocleidomastoid (SCM) + Trapezius
Injury“Coat hanger” shoulder droop. Inability to shrug shoulder (trapezius) and inability to abduct arm past 90° (trapezius required for final 90° abduction). Winging of scapula (inferior angle). Classic: lymph node biopsy in posterior triangle.
XII
Hypoglossal
ExitHypoglossal canal
SupplyAll intrinsic + extrinsic muscles of tongue EXCEPT palatoglossus (CN X)
CourseLoops around occipital artery, passes over external carotid, runs lateral to hyoglossus alongside lingual artery
InjuryTongue deviates to SAME (ipsilateral) side as lesion — genioglossus on intact side pushes tongue towards lesion side. At risk in submandibular gland excision and carotid endarterectomy.
Complete Skull Base Foramina Table
| Foramen | Contents |
|---|---|
| Cribriform plate | CN I (Olfactory) filaments. Fracture → anosmia + CSF rhinorrhoea (dural tears). |
| Optic canal | CN II (Optic nerve) + Ophthalmic artery |
| Superior Orbital Fissure | CN III, IV, V1, VI + sympathetics + ophthalmic veins |
| Foramen Rotundum | CN V2 (Maxillary) |
| Foramen Ovale | CN V3 (Mandibular) + accessory meningeal artery + lesser petrosal nerve |
| Foramen Spinosum | Middle meningeal artery + vein (epidural haematoma) |
| Carotid canal | Internal carotid artery + sympathetic plexus |
| Internal Acoustic Meatus | CN VII + CN VIII + labyrinthine artery |
| Jugular Foramen | CN IX (Glossopharyngeal), CN X (Vagus), CN XI (Accessory) + Internal Jugular Vein |
| Hypoglossal Canal | CN XII |
| Foramen Magnum | Medulla oblongata, CN XI (spinal roots), vertebral arteries, anterior/posterior spinal arteries |
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