Superior pharyngeal constrictor muscle

The superior pharyngeal constrictor muscle is a quadrilateral muscle of the pharynx. It is the uppermost and thinnest of the three pharyngeal constrictors.

Superior pharyngeal constrictor muscle
Muscles of the pharynx and cheek.
Muscles of the pharynx, viewed from behind, together with the associated vessels and nerves.
Details
OriginMedial pterygoid plate, pterygomandibular raphé, alveolar process
InsertionPharyngeal raphe, pharyngeal tubercle
ArteryAscending pharyngeal artery and tonsillar branch of facial artery
NervePharyngeal plexus of vagus nerve
ActionsSwallowing
Identifiers
LatinMusculus constrictor pharyngis superior
TA98A05.3.01.103
TA22179
FMA46621
Anatomical terms of muscle

The muscle is divided into four parts according to its four distincts origins: a pterygopharyngeal, buccopharyngeal, mylopharyngeal, and a glossopharyngeal part. The muscle inserts onto the pharyngeal raphe, and pharyngeal spine. It is innervated by pharyngeal branch of the vagus nerve via the pharyngeal plexus. It acts to convey a bolus down towards the esophagus, facilitating swallowing.

Anatomy

Origin

The four parts of the muscle are distinguished depending upon the origin:

Insertion

The fibers curve backward to be inserted into the pharyngeal raphe, being also prolonged by means of an aponeurosis to the pharyngeal spine on the basilar part of the occipital bone.

Innervation

The superior pharyngeal constrictor muscle is innervated by the pharyngeal branch of the vagus nerve via the pharyngeal plexus.

Relations

The interval between the upper border of the muscle and the base of the skull is closed by the pharyngeal aponeurosis, and is known as the sinus of Morgagni.[1]

There is an interval between superior pharyngeal constrictor and middle pharyngeal constrictor, this space contains glossopharyngeal nerve, lingual nerve and the stylopharyngeus muscle.[1]

The superior fibers arch beneath the levator veli palatini muscle and the Eustachian tube.

Actions/movements

As soon as the bolus of food is received in the pharynx, the elevator muscles relax, the pharynx descends, and the constrictors contract upon the bolus, conveying it downward into the esophagus.

Additional images

References

Public domain This article incorporates text in the public domain from page 1143 of the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)

  1. McMinn, R., 1994. Last's anatomy: Regional and applied (9th ed).
  • lesson8 at The Anatomy Lesson by Wesley Norman (Georgetown University) (latpharyngealitems3)
  • "Anatomy diagram: 05287.011-1". Roche Lexicon - illustrated navigator. Elsevier. Archived from the original on 2013-04-22.
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