Sinus of Morgagni (pharynx)

In the pharynx, the sinus of Morgagni is the enclosed space between the upper border of the superior pharyngeal constrictor muscle, the base of the skull and the pharyngeal aponeurosis.[1]

Contents

Structures passing through this sinus are:

  1. Cartilaginous part of Auditory tube
  2. Levator veli palatini muscle
  3. Ascending palatine artery
  4. Palatine branch of Ascending pharyngeal artery

Clinical aspect

In nasopharyngeal carcinoma, the tumor may extend laterally and involve this sinus involving the mandibular nerve. This produces a triad of symptoms known as Trotter's Triad. These symptoms are:

1) Conductive deafness (due to eustachian tube obstruction)
2) Ipsilateral immobility of the soft palate
3) Trigeminal neuralgia
gollark: What? That's literally just one function.
gollark: A... printf style?
gollark: Because haskellers are weird.
gollark: Well, most things.
gollark: If I'm looking at some Go, it'd probably be easier to understand what it's doing than some Haskell, admittedly, but that applies to everything.

References

  1. Gray's Anatomy 1918, Chapter: The Pharynx Archived 2012-01-21 at the Wayback Machine


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.