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Head and Neck Embryology

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Title: Head and Neck Embryology


1
Head and Neck Embryology
  • R. Dale Reynolds
  • University of Texas at Houston
  • Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery

2
Branchial and Pharyngeal Arches
  • Fourth week
  • Neural crest cells
  • Most skeletal and connective tissue in HN
  • Numbered cranial ? caudal
  • Four well-defined pairs visible externally
  • Fifth and sixth rudimentary
  • Separated by grooves

3
Branchial and Pharyngeal Arches
  • First Mandibular
  • Mandibular Prominence ? jaw
  • Maxillary Prominence ? maxilla/zyg/temp
  • Second Hyoid

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Branchial and Pharyngeal Arches
  • Fate
  • Typical arch contains
  • Aortic arch
  • Cartilaginous rod (skeleton of arch)
  • Muscular component
  • Nerve

6
Branchial and Pharyngeal Arches
7
Pharyngeal Pouches
  • First
  • Tubotympanic recess ? tympanic membrane
  • Connects with pharynx ? eustachian tube
  • Second
  • Palatine tonsil, tonsillar fossa
  • Third
  • Inferior parathyroid gland
  • Thymus

8
Pharyngeal Pouches
  • Fourth
  • Superior parathyroid gland
  • Ultimobranchial body fuses with thyroid
  • Parafollicular C cells ? calcitonin
  • Fifth
  • Rudimentary

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10
Pharyngeal Pouches
11
Branchial or Pharyngeal Grooves
  • Four on each side
  • Separate branchial or pharyngeal arches
  • First ? External acoustic meatus
  • Others lie in depression (cervical sinus) which
    obliterates

12
Branchial or Pharyngeal Grooves
13
Branchial or Pharyngeal Membranes
  • Only one pair contribute to adult structures
  • First ? tympanic membrane

14
Branchial and Pharyngeal Anomalies
  • Congenital Auricular Sinuses and Cysts
  • Small sinuses (pits) and cysts commonly found in
    a triangular area of skin anterior to the ear
  • May be remnant of branchial or pharyngeal groove

15
Branchial and Pharyngeal Anomalies
  • Branchial Sinuses
  • Lateral cervical Uncommon, open externally
    (neck), failure of second groove or cervical
    sinus to obliterate
  • External branchial sinuses Mucous d/c from
    infants neck, bilateral in 10
  • Internal branchial sinuses Rare, persistent
    second pouch, open into intratonsillar cleft

16
Branchial and Pharyngeal Anomalies
  • Branchial Fistula
  • Connection between intratonsillar cleft and neck
  • Runs between internal and external carotids
  • Persistent second groove and second pouch

17
Branchial and Pharyngeal Anomalies
  • Branchial Cysts
  • Develop along anterior border of
    sternocleidomastoid
  • Most inferior to angle of mandible
  • Often present in adulthood
  • Remnants of cervical sinus and/or second groove

18
Branchial and Pharyngeal Anomalies
  • Branchial Vestiges
  • Cartilaginous or bony remnants
  • Usually anterior to inferior third of
    sternocleidomastoid

19
Branchial and Pharyngeal Anomalies
  • First Arch Syndrome
  • First branchial or pharyngeal arch
  • Treacher Collins syndrome
  • Malar hypoplasia, down-slanting of palpebral
    fissures, lower eyelid colobomas, ear
    deformations
  • Pierre Robin syndrome
  • Hypoplasia of the mandible, cleft palate, and
    defects of the eye and ear

20
Branchial and Pharyngeal Anomalies
  • DiGeorge Syndrome (Congenital Thymic and
    Parathyroid Aplasia)
  • Failure of third and fourth pouches to
    differentiate into thymus and parathyroid glands
  • Hypoparathyroidism
  • Increased incidence of infections
  • Shortened philtrum
  • Low-set notched ears
  • Nasal clefts
  • Thyroid hypoplasia
  • Cardiac anomalies

21
Branchial and Pharyngeal Anomalies
  • Accessory Thymic Tissue
  • Isolated portion of thymic tissue may persist
  • Often in close association with inferior
    parathyroid gland

22
Branchial and Pharyngeal Anomalies
  • Ectopic Parathyroid Gland
  • Variable in number (2-6) and location
  • Superior more constant than inferior
  • Thyroid to thorax
  • Absence of Parathroid Gland

23
Thyroid Gland
  • Begins as thickening in the floor of the pharynx
  • Forms an outpouching (thyroid diverticulum)
  • Descends into neck passing ventral to hyoid bone
    and laryngeal cartilages
  • Connected to tongue by thryoglossal duct at
    foramen cecum

24
Thyroid Gland
  • Isthmus connects right and left lobes
  • Thyroglossal duct degenerates
  • Blind pit marks the foramen cecum
  • Pyramidal lobe extends superiorly from the
    isthmus in fifty per cent

25
Thyroid Anomalies
  • Thyroglossal Duct Cysts and Sinuses
  • May form anywhere along the course followed by
    the thyroglossal duct
  • Most seen by 5 yo
  • Asymptomatic unless infected
  • Midline, painless, moveable neck mass
  • Sinuses are open, cysts are closed

26
Thyroid Anomalies
  • Ectopic Thyroid Gland
  • Lingual thyroid
  • Result of failure to descend
  • Often only thyroid tissue present
  • Accessory thyroid tissue
  • Tongue
  • Neck, superior or lateral to thyroid

27
Tongue
  • General
  • Merged distal tongue buds ? anterior 2/3
  • Copula and hypobranchial eminence ? posterior 1/3
  • Terminal sulcus divides anterior and posterior
  • Taste buds
  • Most are filiform papillae and are sensitive to
    touch
  • Muscles
  • Supplied by XII except for palatoglossus (X)

28
Tongue
  • Nerves
  • Sensory for anterior 2/3 is from V3 (lingual)
  • Chorda tympani (VII) taste buds for anterior 2/3
    (except for vallate papillae supplied by IX)
  • IX supplies posterior 1/3
  • X (Superior Laryngeal) supplies area around
    epiglottis

29
Tongue
  • Taste buds
  • Most are filiform papillae and are sensitive to
    touch

30
Tongue Anomalies
  • Lingual cysts and Fistulas
  • Persistence of thyroglossal duct open to foramen
    cecum
  • Ankyloglosia (Tongue-Tie)
  • Short frenulum to tip, stretches with time
  • Macroglossia
  • Usually from muscular hypertrophy or lymphangioma
  • Microglossia
  • Associate with micrognathia and limb defects
    (Hanharts syndrome)
  • Bifid or Cleft Tongue (Glossochisis)
  • Incomplete fusion of distal tongue buds ? deep
    median sulcus

31
Ear
  • Microtia
  • 16000-8000 births
  • Associated with hemifacial microsomia
  • Nerves
  • Great auricular (C2, C3) ? lower lateral/lower
    cranial
  • Auriculotemporal (V3) ? superolateral/ anterior
    and superior external auditory canal
  • Lesser occipital ? superior cranial
  • Arnolds (X) ?concha / posterior auditory canal
    (referred oropharyngeal pain)
  • Three anterior hillocks of the first branchial
    arch form the tragus, helical crus, and superior
    helix
  • Three posterior hillocks of the second branchial
    arch form the antihelix, antitragus, and lobule
  • First branchial groove forms external auditory
    meatus

32
Ear
33
Face
  • Stomodeum is primitive mouth
  • Five facial primordia appear as prominences
    around stomodeum
  • Single fronto(?forehead)nasal? most of
    nose(except septum/alae) prominence ? optic
    vesicles ? eyes
  • Paired maxillary prominences ? lateral upper lip,
    most of maxilla, secondary palate
  • Paired mandibular prominences ? chin, lower lip,
    lower cheek

34
Face
  • Mandible forms first
  • Nasal placodes ? nasal pits
  • Six auricular hillocks ? ear
  • Epithelial cord canalizes in nasolacrimal groove
    ? nasolacrimal duct
  • Atresia if canalization fails

35
Face
  • Lateral nasal prominence ? nasal alae
  • Medial nasal prominences merge ? intermaxillary
    segment ? philtrum of lip, premaxilla (gum),
    primary palate, nasal septum
  • Second arch ? muscles of facial expression (VII)
  • First arch ? muscles of mastication (V)

36
Face
  • Labiogingival lamina ? lips and gingivae, lingual
    frenulum
  • Changes
  • Early fetal period Flat nose and underdeveloped
    mandible
  • Enlarging brain Prominent forehead, medial
    movement of eyes and external ears rise

37
Nasal Cavities
  • Nasal placodes ? nasal pits ? deepening ? nasal
    sacs
  • Oronasal membrane separates the oral cavity from
    the nasal sacs
  • Membrane ruptures ? primitive chonae (opening b/w
    nasal cavity and nasopharynx)

38
Nasal Cavities
  • Olfactory system
  • Ectodermal epithelium in the roof of each nasal
    cavity ? specialized ? olfactory epithelium
  • Some epithelial cells ? olfactory receptors
    (axons become olfactory nerve) and grow into
    bulbs of the brain

39
Nasal Cavities
  • Paranasal sinuses
  • From outgrowths of nasal cavity walls ? pneumatic
    (air-filled) extensions of the nasal cavities in
    adjacent bones
  • Original openings of the outgrowths persist as
    the orifices of the adult sinuses
  • Most are rudimentary in newborns
  • Frontal sinuses are visible by seven
  • Sphenoidal sinuses usually evident by two
  • Vomeronasal cartilage ? narrow cartilage strips
    between the inferior edge of the cartilage of
    nasal septum and vomer

40
Palate
  • Palatogenesis from 5th 12th week
  • Primary Palate
  • Median palatine process begins to develop from
    deep intermaxillary segment of maxilla
  • Primary palate forms the premaxillary part of
    the maxilla
  • Represents a small part of the adult hard palate
    (anterior to the incisive foramen that lodges the
    incisor teeth)

41
Palate
  • Secondary Palate
  • Primordium of hard and soft palates that extend
    posteriorly from the incisive foramen
  • Shelf-like structures called lateral palatine
    processes (palatine shelves) project
    inferiomedially on each side of the tongue

42
Palate
  • Secondary Palate
  • Shelves elongate and ascend to a horizontal
    position superior to the tongue
  • Shelves fuse in a median plane with nasal septum
    and posterior primary palate
  • Elevation to the horizontal position is thought
    to be caused by the intrinsic shelf elevating
    force by hydration of hyaluronic acid in the
    shelves

43
Palate
  • Secondary Palate
  • Nasal septum develops from downgrowths of merged
    medial nasal prominences
  • Fusion between nasal septum and palatine
    processes proceeds anteriorly to posteriorly

44
Palate
  • Secondary Palate
  • Bone develops in primary palate forming the
    premaxillary part of the maxilla which lodges
    between the incisor teeth
  • Bone extends from the maxillae and palatine bones
    in to the lateral palatine processes to form the
    hard palate

45
Palate
  • Secondary Palate
  • Posterior aspects do not ossify
  • Extend posteriorly beyond nasal septum and fuse
    to form the soft palate and uvula
  • Palatine raphe permanently indicates the line of
    fusion of the lateral palatine processes

46
Palate
  • Secondary Palate
  • Small nasopalatine canal persists between
    premaxilla and palatine processes as incisive
    foramen (openings for incisive canals)

47
Clefts
  • Lip and palate
  • Upper lip and anterior maxilla with or without
    hard and soft palate
  • Hard and soft palate
  • Complete posterior (to incisive foramen) palate
  • Anterior cleft anomalies
  • Cleft lip, with or without a cleft of the
    alveolar part of the maxilla
  • Result from deficiency of mesenchyme in the
    maxillary prominences and intermaxillary segment

48
Clefts
  • Posterior cleft anomalies
  • Clefts of secondary or posterior palate that
    extend through the soft and hard palate to the
    incisive foramen
  • Caused by defective development of the secondary
    palate and result from the growth distortions of
    the lateral palatine processes (shelves) which
    prevent their medial migration and fusion

49
Clefts
  • Lip
  • 11000 births, 70 male,
  • CaucasiongtAsiangtHispanicgtAA
  • Notches on vermilion border to alveolar maxilla

50
Clefts
  • Unilateral
  • Failure of maxillary prominence on affected side
    to unite with merged medial nasal prominences
  • Consequence of failure of mesenchymal masses to
    merge and the mesenchyme to proliferate and
    smooth out the overlying epithelium
  • Results in persistent labial groove
  • Epithelium in the labial groove stretches and
    tissues of the floor breakdown
  • Lip is divided into medial and lateral parts
  • Bridge of tissue (Simonarts band) joins parts of
    incomplete cleft lip

51
Unilateral cleft lip
52
Clefts
  • Bilateral
  • Failure of mesenchymal masses in the maxillary
    prominences to met and unite with the merged
    medial nasal prominences
  • Epithelium in both labial grooves becomes
    stretched and breaks down
  • May have varying degrees of defects on each side
  • When there is a complete bilateral cleft of the
    lip and alveolar part of the maxilla, the
    intermaxillary segment hangs free and projects
    anteriorly
  • These defects are deforming because of loss of
    continuity with the orbicularis oris muscle which
    purses the lips

53
Clefts
  • Median (rare)
  • Upper
  • Mesenchymal deficiency causing partial or
    complete failure of medial nasal prominences to
    merge and form the intermaxillary segment
  • Characteristic of the Mohr syndrome
  • Lower
  • Failure of mesenchymal masses in the mandibular
    prominences to merge completely and smooth out
    the embryonic cleft between them

54
Clefts
  • Palate
  • /- lip in 12500 births, females
  • Uvula, soft/hard palate, lip, alveolar maxilla
  • Failure of mesenchymal masses in lateral palatine
    processes (shelves) to fuse with each other, the
    nasal septum and posterior margin of the median
    palatine process

55
Clefts
  • Palate (divided by incisive foramen)
  • Anterior
  • Failure of mesenchymal masses in lateral palatine
    masses to fuse with primary palate
  • Posterior
  • Failure of mesenchymal masses in lateral palatine
    masses to fuse with nasal septum
  • Both
  • Failure of mesenchymal masses in lateral palatine
    masses to fuse with each other, primary palate or
    nasal septum

56
Craniofacial clefts
  • 1.4-5.1100,000
  • Numbered 0-14 (sum14)
  • 0-7 are facial
  • 8-14 are cranial
  • Number 7 is least rare (15600) hemifacial
    microsomia (hypoplasia of mandibular ramus,
    hypoplasia of midface, others) associated with
    Goldenhar syndrome
  • Bilateral 6,7,8 is complete form of
    Treacher-Collins

57
Others
  • Facial clefts
  • Macrostomia
  • Microstomia
  • Nasal
  • Single nostril
  • Bifid nose
  • Absence

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