SCLP N Face
SCLP N Face
SCLP N Face
FACE
DEVELOPMENT OF FACE AND BONES OF FACE
SKIN AND SUPERFICIAL FASCIA
MUSCLES OF THE FACE
NERVOUS INNERVATION OF FACE – it’s APPLIED ANATOMY
ARTERIAL SUPPLY OF FACE
VENOUS DRAINAGE – it’s APPLIED ANATOMY
LYMPHATIC DRAINAGE OF FACE
SURGICAL APPROACHES TO FACIAL SKELETON
CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
SURGICAL ANATOMY OF SCALP AND FACE
INTRODUCTION :
• The scalp, temple and face are important areas of head; where injuries are
frequently inflicted, they range from superficial wounds to deep cuts.
• The face is the common site for plastic surgery for esthetics or to repair the
congenital defects or the ones due to trauma.
• - Inspection of face provides information about various underlying bodily
diseases.
Scalp:
The soft tissues covering the cranial vault is the scalp.
Extent of scalp:
Anteriorly- supra orbital margins
Posteriorly- external occipital protruberance
and superior nuchal lines
Laterally – superior temporal lines
Structure of scalp:
Scalp is made up of 5 layers
1. S – Skin
2. C – Connective tissue [Superficial Fascia]
3. A – Deep fascia in form of Epicranial
Aponeurosis
4. L – Loose areolar tissue
5. P – Pericranium
1. SKIN :
Thick and contains hair follicles.
Rich in sebaceous glands and sweat glands.
Adherent to epicranial aponeurosis through dense superficial fascia.
APPLIED ANATOMY :
• Abundance of sebaceous glands skin of scalp is common site for sebaceous
cysts.
• Wounds of scalp bleed profusely because, vessel retraction is prevented by
fibrous fascia and also due to rich vasculature & free anastomoses b/w branches
of occipital and superficial temporal vessels.
3. EPICRANIAL APONEUROSIS: [ Galea aponeurotica ]
Applied anatomy ;
- wounds gape open when it pierces till aponeurotic layer,
because of the pull of the bellies of occipitofrontalis muscle
4. LOOSE AREOLAR TISSUE:
Thin mobile sub aponeurotic layer that loosely connects the
epicranial aponeurosis to pericranium
Anteriorly - into eyelids, as frontalis muscle has no bony
attachment
Posteriorly - highest & superior nuchal lines
Laterally – superior temporal lines
Contents: few small arteries and emissary veins
Clinical anatomy:
• This layer of loose areolar tissue is known as the dangerous
area of scalp, as emissary veins open here and transmit
infection from scalp to cranial venous sinuses.
5. PERICRANIUM :
Periosteum covering the outer surface of the skull
bones.
Loosely attached to surface of bones, but firmly
adherent to their sutures.
The sutural ligaments binds it to the endocranium.
Clinical Anatomy :
- As the pericranium is adherent to sutures,
collections of fluid deep to this layer
(cephalhematoma) take shape of bone concerned
when there is fracture of particular bone.
- The arteries of scalp and superficial temporal region are derived from
external and internal carotid arteries, these 2 systems anastomoses over the
temple.
ARTERIAL SUPPLY OF SCALP AND SUPERFICIAL TEMPORAL REGION
Angular vein
Retro mandibular vein
Deep facial vein
Facial vein Anterior division Posterior division
Posterior
auricular vein
External Jugular vein
Common Facial vein
Subclavian vein
Internal jugular vein
SENSORY INNERVATION :
MOTOR NERVES :
• BICORONAL FLAP
• HEMICORONAL FLAP
Development of face
- 5 processes of face; one fronto nasal, two maxillary processes and two
mandibular processes form the face .
When the lesions of skin, viz. scars, pigmented patches, skin cancers are
excised.
It is important to give incisions along the long axis of natural relaxed skin
tension lines and the lesion should be enclosed in an ellipse, so that the
scar will look like a natural skin crease.
Superficial fascia :
- It contains:
( i ) Facial muscles, which are inserted into the skin .
( ii) Vessels and Nerves to the muscles and skin .
( iii ) Variable amount of fat
( fat is absent in eyelids, but well developed in cheeks forming buccal pads)
• Deep fascia - absent in the face ,
but present over : Parotid gland - parotid fascia
Buccinator - Buccopharyngeal fascia
> Palpation :
Thumb on skin , index finger on oral mucosa oppose to thumb and compress gently to feel
hub of cart wheel shape
NERVE SUPPLY OF FACE:
5 ) cervical → platysma
Applied Anatomy
4) FREY’S Syndrome :
• Sweating while eating (gustatory sweating) and facial
flushing.
• Injury to auriculotemporal nerve, typically after surgical
trauma to the parotid gland.
• This nerve, when it heals, reattaches to sweat glands instead
of the original salivary gland (which had been removed
during surgery).
SENSORY NERVE SUPPLY :
Source Cutaneous Nerve Area of Distribution
A)
C) Ophthalmic
Mandibular 1) supratrochlear
1) .N
Auriculo temporal. → upper head
→Upper eyelid
2/3rds of &
division
divisionofofCN. V N forehead
lateral side of auricle,
(trigeminal
CN.V
Nerve)
2) supra orbital . N →temporal région.
upper eyelid, frontal air
sinus, scalp.
3) Lacrimal. N → Median part of both
2) Buccal. N →skin of lower part of
eyelids.
cheek.
4) Infra trochlear .N → Lower part of dorsum &
tip of Nose.
5) External nasal. N → Later part of upper
3) Mental. N →Anterior part of
eyelid
temporal region.
Emissary vein
Hence called Dangerous
Cavernous sinus area of Face
1. Approaches to mandible:
• Submandibular approach
• Retro mandibular approach
• Pre auricular approach
• Intra oral approach
3. Approaches to Maxilla
• Weber fergusson approach
Conclusion: