Hypoglossal canal
Hypoglossal canal | |
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Details | |
Identifiers | |
Latin | canalis nervi hypoglossi |
TA98 | A02.1.04.016 |
TA2 | 559 |
FMA | 75370 |
Anatomical terms of bone |
The hypoglossal canal is a foramen in the occipital bone of the skull. It is hidden medially and superiorly to each occipital condyle. The hypoglossal nerve traverses the canal.
Structure
It transmits the hypoglossal nerve from its point of entry near the medulla oblongata to its exit from the base of the skull near the jugular foramen. It lies in the epiphyseal junction between the basiocciput and the jugular process of the occipital bone.
Function
The hypoglossal canal has recently been used to try to determine the antiquity of human speech. Researchers have found that hominids who lived as long as 2 million years ago had the same size canal as that of modern-day chimpanzees; some scientists thus assume they were incapable of speech. However, archaic H. sapiens 400,000 years ago had the same size canal as that of modern humans, meaning they could have been capable of speech. Some Neanderthals also had the same size hypoglossal canal as archaic H. sapiens. However recent studies involving several primate species have failed to find conclusive evidence of a relationship between its size and speech.[1]
Clinical significance
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The hypoglossal canal is formed during the embryological stage of development in mammals, sometimes leading to the presence of more than two canals as the occipital bone is formed.[2] Study of this area aids in the diagnosis of a variety of tumors found at the base of the skull, including: large glomus jugulare neoplasms, myelomas, and the occasional meningioma.[3] Studies of the hypoglossal canal revolve around the development of safe drilling techniques to conduct surgery on that area of the brain.[4]
Additional images
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Hypoglossal canal
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Base of the skull. Upper surface.
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Median sagittal section through the occipital bone and first three cervical vertebræ.
See also
References
- ^ 02.24.99 - Graduate Students Discredit Theory that Neanderthals Could Talk
- ^ Takahashi, H.; Tanaka, H.; Fujita, N.; Tomiyama, N. (2014). "Bilateral persistent hypoglossal arteries: MRI findings". British Journal of Radiology. 85 (1010): e46-48. doi:10.1259/bjr/21939976. PMC 3473955. PMID 22308227.
- ^ Voyvodic, F; Whyte, A.; Slavotinek, J. (1995). "The hypoglossal canal: normal MR enhancement pattern". American Journal of Neuroradiology. 16: 1707–1710.
- ^ Katsuta, T.; Matsushima, T.; Wen, H.T.; Rhoton, A.L. (2000). "Trajectory of the hypoglossal nerve in the hypoglossal canal: significance for the transcondylar approach". Neurologia Medico-Chirurgica. 40: 206–210. doi:10.2176/nmc.40.206.
External links
- Anatomy figure: 22:5b-15 at Human Anatomy Online, SUNY Downstate Medical Center
- cranialnerves at The Anatomy Lesson by Wesley Norman (Georgetown University) (XII)
- "Anatomy diagram: 34257.000-1". Roche Lexicon - illustrated navigator. Elsevier. Archived from the original on 2014-01-01.
- "Anatomy diagram: 34257.000-2". Roche Lexicon - illustrated navigator. Elsevier. Archived from the original on 2014-01-01.
- Image at uwo.ca