Skull Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
- For symbolic or mythic uses of the human skull, see Skull (symbolism).
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2 Bones of the human skull 3 See also |
In humans, the skull is the uppermost portion of the human skeleton. It is made up of a number of bony parts—8 in the skull proper (neurocranium) and 14 in the facial area (splanchnocranium). There are five main skull sections—one occipital, two frontal, two parietal. The sections are fused together in adults along sutures—metopic, coronal, sagittal and lambdoid. At birth these sutures are fibrous and moveable, necessary for birth and later growth. At the points where sutures meet are fontanelles, the main ones are the anterior and posterior. The posterior fontanelle usually closes by eight weeks but the anterior fontanelle can remain up to eighteen months. The anterior fontanelle is located at the junction of the frontal and parietal bones, it is a "soft spot" on a baby's forehead. Careful observation will show that you can count a baby's heartrate by observing his or her pulse pulsing softly through the anterior fontanelle.
If the brain is bruised or injured it can be extremely serious. Normally the skull protects the brain from damage through its hard unyieldingness, but in some cases of head injury, there can be raised intracranial pressure through mechanisms such as a subdural haematoma. In these cases the raised intracranial pressure can cause herniation of the brain out of the foramen magnum ('coning') because there is no space for the brain to expand to—this can result in significant brain damage or death unless an urgent operation is performed to relieve the pressure. This is why patients with concussion must be watched extremely carefully.
In earlier times, a skull operation called trepanation was often performed for semi-mystical reasons and not only as an attempted life-saving technique.
The skull also contains the sinus cavities. The meninges are the membranes that separate the brain from the skull.
Although persons of East Asian descent are occasionally stereotyped as different from other ethnic groups on the basis of a variety of traits like eye shape, nose shape, hair color, and skin color, nearly all such stereotypes are incorrect and highly flawed. Among neurologists and pathologists, it is well-known that the most consistent and unique trait in East Asians is skull shape. However, this bit of knowledge is rarely discussed in public because of the need to avoid encouraging pseudoscientific theories like phrenology which attempt to connect skull shape to intelligence.
Note: Ole Worm, Professor of Anatomy at Copenhagen, 1624–1639, was erroneously supposed to have given the first detailed description of these bones.
The following is a list of holes, or foramina, in the base of the skull and what goes through each of them. Arranged from anterior to posterior:
This is an Article on Skull. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Skull Humans
Bones of the human skull
Cranial bones
Facial bones
Ear ossicles
Wormian bones
In addition to the usual centers of ossification of the cranium, others may occur, giving rise to irregular isolated bones termed sutural or Wormian bones. They occur most frequently in the course of the lambdoidal suture, but are occasionally seen at the fontanelles, especially the posterior. One, the pterion ossicle, sometimes exists between the sphenoidal angle of the parietal bone and the great wing of the sphenoid bone. They have a tendency to be more or less symmetrical on the two sides of the skull, and vary in size. Their number is generally limited to two or three; but more than a hundred have been found in the skull of an adult hydrocephalic subject.Foramina of skull base
See also
This article is based on an entry from the 1918 edition of Gray's Anatomy, which is in the public domain. As such, some of the information contained herein may be outdated. Please edit the article if this is the case, and feel free to remove this notice when it is no longer relevant.
