Volume 222, Issue 2 pp. 207-210
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Morphology of the mandibulo-stylohyoid ligament in human adults

Kazuyuki Shimada

Kazuyuki Shimada

Department of Anatomy, Louisiana State University Medical Center, New Orleans, Louisiana 70112

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Raymond F. Gasser

Corresponding Author

Raymond F. Gasser

Department of Anatomy, Louisiana State University Medical Center, New Orleans, Louisiana 70112

Department of Anatomy LSU Medical Center, 1901 Perdido Street, New Orleans, LA 70112Search for more papers by this author
First published: October 1988
Citations: 11

Abstract

The mandibulo-stylohyoid ligament is a consistently occurring connective tissue band or sheet that courses between the angle of the mandible and the stylohyoid ligament. Previously, in a few instances it has been variously named and described as a thickening of deep cervical fascia. Recently, Shimada et al. (1986) described the connective tissue thickening and named it the mandibulo-stylohyoid ligament because of its arrangement and attachments. In the present study the ligament was dissected in 99 adult cadavers (both white and black, 98 right sides, 95 left sides). It was present in all of the specimens examined and has been classified into three types according to refinements in its morphology. Type 1: The ligament was a thick, separate band that coursed from the region of the angle of the mandible to the stylohyoid ligament. Type 2: The ligament had the same attachments as Type 1 but was more extensive, being continuous with the stylomandibular ligament. Type 3: The ligament had the same attachments as Type 1 but was thin and less well developed. The Type 1 arrangement occurred 41% of the time, Type 2, 37% of the time, and Type 3, 22% of the time. The consistency and arrangement of the ligament suggests an important role of additional structural support in the region of the angle of the mandible and hyoid bone.

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