Muscles, a "Muscle Head" Would Likely Know Nothing About
The Bare Bones
Let It Go to Your Head
Getting on Your Nerves
It's All in Your Head OR Neck
100
The end of the muscle attached to the more moveable structure.
What is the insertion? p. 86
100
The number of bones that compose the neurocranium and the number of bones that compose the viscerocranium.
What is eight and fourteen? p. 44
100
The major arteries that supply the head and neck.
What are the common Carotid and Subclavian Arteries? p. 128
100
This is an abnormal area of sensation, burning or prickling that can occur with the adminstration of local anesthesia or with infections.
What is Paresthesia? pp. 216, 302
100
These cervical lymph nodes drain lymph from much of the head and neck but also communicate with the lypmh nodes that drain the breast region.
What are the Inferior Deep Cervical Lymph Nodes? p. 237
200
The muscles of the Head and Neck innervated by the seventh cranial, or facial nerve.
What are the muscles of facial expression? p. 88
200
Two single midline cranial bones.
What are the Ethmoid Bone and Sphenoid Bone? pp. 50 and 52
200
An anterior branch of the external carotid artery that supplies blood to many of the suprahyoid muscles, the tongue, and tonsils.
What is the Lingual Artery? pp. 131-132
200
Two Cranial Nerves that pass through the Superior Orbital Fissure.
What are are the Ocluomoter, Trochelear nerves or Abducens and Ophthalmic neves? p. 35
200
The the secondary node drainage for the retroauricular, anterior auricular, and superficial parotid nodes.
What are the Superior Deep Cervical Nodes? p. 230
300
The muscle of facial expression with four disctinct movements; closing lips, pursing lips, grimacing, pouting/kissing.
What is the Orbicularois Oris Muscle? p. 91
300
The bony opening through which BOTH the right and left nasopalatine nerves exit onto the palate.
What is the incisive foramen? p. 56
300
A vascular lesion or bruise resulting when a blood vessel is injured, and a small amount of blood escapes into the surrounding tissue and then clots.
What is a Hematoma? p. 297
300
The Sublingual Salivary Gland, Submandibular Duct, Hypoglossal Nerve and Lingual Nerve and Artery are all contents of this space.
What is the Sublingual Space? p. 258
400
Most of these muscles (four pairs) function to depress the hyoid bone.
What are the infrahyoid muscles. p. 102
400
In addition to the Zygomatic process of the Maxilla, this landmark needs to be noted during the adminstration of a local anesthetic agent to the maxillary posterior teeth.
What is the maxillary tuberosity? pp. 16-17
400
Blood vessels that anastomose with the pterygoid plexus of veins.
What are the Facial Vein and the Retromandbiular Vein? p. 140
400
The smallest branch of the facvial nerve that supplies innervation for the salivary glands.
What is the Chorda Tympani Nerve? p. 187
400
Contraction of a single lateral pterygoid muscle, gliding and rotational movements are all directly asssciated with this type of action involving the Temporomandibular Joint.
What is Laterail Deviation of the Joint? p. 121
500
These muscles of the pharynx create the vertical folds of tissue posterior to each palatine tonsil.
What are the Palatopharyngeus Muscles? p. 108
500
The cranial bone important to dental professionasl because it provides passage by way of foramina for the branches of the trigeminal cranial nerve.
What is the Sphenoid Bone? p. 51
500
This larger terminal branch of the external carotid artery begins at the neck of the mandibular condyle, within the parotid gland, runs between the mandible and sphenomandibular ligament, through the infratemporal fossa and either superficial or deep to the lateral ptyergoid muscle.
What is the Maxillary Artery? p. 134
500
The cranial nerve that provides efferent innervation to the intrinsic and extrinsic muscles of the tongue.
What is the Hypoglossal Nerve? p. 175
500
The glabella between the supraorbital ridges is rounded and prominent in this population.
What is the Adult Male population? p. 46