small room in which a monk or nun lives (同)cubicle
a device that delivers an electric current as the result of a chemical reaction (同)electric cell
a room where a prisoner is kept (同)jail cell, prison cell
(biology) the basic structural and functional unit of all organisms; they may exist as independent units of life (as in monads) or may form colonies or tissues as in higher plants and animals
any small compartment; "the cells of a honeycomb"
a small unit serving as part of or as the nucleus of a larger political movement (同)cadre
of or near the head end or toward the front plane of a body
The ethmoid sinus or ethmoidal air cells of the ethmoid bone is one of the four paired paranasal sinuses. The cells are variable in both size and number in the lateral mass of each of the ethmoid bones and cannot be palpated during an extraoral examination.[1] They are divided into anterior and posterior groups.[2] The ethmoidal air cells are numerous thin-walled cavities situated in the ethmoidal labyrinth and completed by the frontal, maxilla, lacrimal, sphenoidal, and palatine bones. They lie between the upper parts of the nasal cavities and the orbits, and are separated from these cavities by thin bony lamellae.[3]
Contents
1Groups of sinuses
2Development
3Innervation
4Haller cell
5Pathology
6Additional images
7References
8External links
Groups of sinuses
The groups of the ethmoidal air cells drain into the nasal meatuses.[3]
The posterior group the posterior ethmoidal sinus drains into the superior meatus above the middle nasal concha; sometimes one or more opens into the sphenoidal sinus.
The anterior group the anterior ethmoidal sinus drains into the middle meatus of the nose by way of the infundibulum.
The two groups are divided by the basal lamella. This is one of the bony divisions of the ethmoid bone and is mostly contained inside the ethmoid labyrinth. Medially the lamella becomes the bony part of the middle concha.[4]
Development
The ethmoidal cells (sinuses) are not present at birth, however by 2 years of age they are recognisable through the use of Computerised Tomography (CT) scanning.[5]
Innervation
The ethmoidal air cells receive sensory fibers from the anterior and posterior ethmoidal nerves, and the orbital branches of the pterygopalatine ganglion, which carry the postganglionic parasympathetic nerve fibers for mucous secretion from the facial nerve.
Haller cell
Haller cells are infraorbital ethmoidal air cells lateral to the lamina papyracea. These may arise from the anterior or posterior ethmoidal sinuses.
Pathology
Acute ethmoiditis in childhood and ethmoidal carcinoma may spread superiorly causing meningitis and cerebrospinal fluid leakage or it may spread laterally into the orbit causing proptosis and diplopia.[6]
Additional images
Ethmoid sinus. Ethmoidal air cells.Deep dissection. Superior view.
Ethmoid sinus cancer that has spread to the lymph nodes
References
This article incorporates text in the public domain from page 154 of the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)
^Illustrated Anatomy of the Head and Neck, Fehrenbach and Herring, Elsevier, 2012, page 64
^ abOtorhinolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery, Anniko, Springer, 2010, page 188
^Hechl, Peter S.; Setliff, Reuben C.; Tschabitscher, Manfred (1997). Endoscopic Anatomy of the Paranasal Sinuses. Springer Vienna. pp. 9–28. doi:10.1007/978-3-7091-6536-2_2. ISBN 978-3-7091-7345-9.
^Moore, K.L Et al(2014). Clinically Oriented Anatomy. Baltimore: Page960
^Human Anatomy, Jacobs, Elsevier, 2008, page 210
External links
Anatomy figure: 33:04-07 at Human Anatomy Online, SUNY Downstate Medical Center
Anatomy photo:33:st-0711 at the SUNY Downstate Medical Center
v
t
e
The neurocranium of the skull
Occipital
Squamous part
external
Inion/External occipital protuberance
Occipital bun
External occipital crest
Nuchal lines
Suprainiac fossa
planes
Occipital
Nuchal
internal
Cruciform eminence
Internal occipital protuberance
Internal occipital crest
Groove for transverse sinus
Lateral parts
Condyle
Condyloid fossa
Condylar canal
Hypoglossal canal
jugular
Jugular process
Jugular tubercle
Basilar part
Pharyngeal tubercle
Clivus
Other
Foramen magnum
Basion
Opisthion
Parietal
Parietal eminence
Temporal line
Parietal foramen
Sagittal sulcus
Sagittal keel
Sagittal crest
Frontal
Squamous part
Frontal suture
Frontal eminence
external
Superciliary arches
Glabella
foramina
Supraorbital foramen
Brow ridge
Foramen cecum
Zygomatic process
internal
Sagittal sulcus
Frontal crest
Orbital part
Ethmoidal notch
Fossa for lacrimal gland
Trochlear fovea
Frontal sinus
Frontonasal duct
Temporal
Squamous part
Articular tubercle
Suprameatal triangle
Mandibular fossa
Petrotympanic fissure
Zygomatic process
Mastoid part
Mastoid foramen
Mastoid process (Mastoid cells)
Mastoid notch
Occipital groove
Sigmoid sulcus
Mastoid antrum (Aditus)
Petrous part
Carotid canal
Facial canal
Hiatus
Internal auditory meatus
Cochlear aqueduct
Stylomastoid foramen
fossae
Subarcuate fossa
Jugular fossa
canaliculi
Inferior tympanic
Mastoid
Styloid process
Petrosquamous suture
(note: ossicles in petrous part, but not part of temporal bone)
Tympanic part
Suprameatal spine
Sphenoid
Surfaces
Superior surface: Sella turcica
Dorsum sellae
Tuberculum sellae
Hypophysial fossa
Posterior clinoid processes
Ethmoidal spine
Chiasmatic groove
Middle clinoid process
Petrosal process
Clivus
Lateral surface: Carotid groove
Sphenoidal lingula
Anterior surface: Sphenoidal sinuses
Great wings
foramina
Rotundum
Ovale
Vesalii
Spinosum
Spine
Infratemporal crest
Sulcus of auditory tube
Small wings
Superior orbital fissure
Anterior clinoid process
Optic canal
Pterygoid processes
fossae
Pterygoid
Scaphoid
pterygoid plates
Lateral
Medial
Pterygoid canal
Hamulus
Other
Body
Sphenoidal conchae
Ethmoid
Plates
Cribriform plate
Crista galli
Olfactory foramina
Perpendicular plate
Surfaces
Lateral surface Orbital lamina
Uncinate process
Medial surface Supreme nasal concha
Superior nasal concha
Superior meatus
Middle nasal concha
Middle meatus
Labyrinth
Ethmoid sinus
ethmoidal foramina
Posterior
Anterior
v
t
e
Anatomy of the human nose
External nose
Ala of nose
nasal cartilages
Septal nasal
Lateral nasal
Major alar
Minor alar
Vomeronasal
Nasal cavity
Openings
Nasal vestibule
Nostril
Choana
Lateral wall
Nasal conchae: Supreme nasal concha
Superior nasal concha
Middle nasal concha
Inferior nasal concha
Nasal meatus: (Supreme
superior
middle
inferior)
Sphenoethmoidal recess
Ethmoid bulla
Agger nasi
Ethmoidal infundibulum
Semilunar hiatus
Maxillary hiatus
Medial wall
Nasal septum
Vomeronasal organ
Nasal mucosa
Olfactory mucosa
Paranasal sinuses
Maxillary sinus
Sphenoidal sinuses
Frontal sinus
Ethmoid sinus
Naso-pharynx
Pharyngeal opening of auditory tube
Salpingopharyngeal fold
Salpingopalatine fold
Torus tubarius
Pharyngeal tonsil
Pharyngeal recess
Anatomy portal
Authority control
TA98: A06.1.03.005
UpToDate Contents
全文を閲覧するには購読必要です。 To read the full text you will need to subscribe.
Indian journal of otolaryngology and head and neck surgery : official publication of the Association of Otolaryngologists of India.Indian J Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg.2015 Sep;67(3):281-6. doi: 10.1007/s12070-015-0874-z. Epub 2015 Jun 30.
Lateral nasal wall of each nasal cavity provides the final common pathway of drainage of the mucociliary clearance of frontal, maxillary and anterior ethmoidal air cells. Anatomical variants like concha bullosa, Haller cells, agger nasi cells, enlarged bulla ethmoidalis may obstruct the mucociliary
BACKGROUND: The superior attachment of the uncinate process (SAUP) is an important landmark in the nasofrontal recess, but its anatomical distribution is still unclear. The objective of this study was to assess the location and number of superior attachments of the uncinate process on computed tomog
International archives of otorhinolaryngology.Int Arch Otorhinolaryngol.2015 Jan;19(1):93-5. doi: 10.1055/s-0033-1353368. Epub 2013 Nov 5.
Introduction Schwannoma of the olfactory groove is an extremely rare tumor that can share a differential diagnosis with meningioma or neuroblastoma. Objectives The authors present a case of giant schwannoma involving the anterior cranial fossa and ethmoid sinuses. Case Report The patient prese
Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hematopathology 53(3), 221-226, 2013
… The patient was diagnosed with DLBCL extending from the ethmoidal sinus to the nasal cavity, orbital cavity, and anterior cranial fossa. … Because lymphoma cells were detected in his spinal fluid, high-dose methotrexate (MTX) and weekly intrathecal MTX and cytarabine injections were administered. … Test results for lymphoma cells in the spinal fluid became negative ; …
anterior ethmoidal cells [TA] the anterior group of air cells of the ethmoidal sinuses; each sinus communicates with the middle meatus of the nasal cavity. Synonym(s): cellulae ethmoidales anteriores [TA], anterior cells, anterior ...
eth·moid cells ethmoidal air cells; evaginations of the mucous membrane of the middle and superior meatus of the nasal cavity into the ethmoidal labyrinth forming multiple small paranasal sinuses; they are subdivided into anterior ...