Abstract

An occipital emissary foramen has been traditionally described as a foramen present in the squamous part of the occipital bone at the occipital protuberance transmitting a vein that connects the confluence of sinuses with the occipital vein. The present study was done on 221 South Indian adult modern human skulls of unknown sex in the Department of Anatomy, St John's Medical College, Bangalore, India. The foramen was observed in 21/221 (9.50%) skulls, 6/21 (28.57%) to the right of, 10/21 (47.61%) to the left of, and 2/21 (9.52%) on the External Occipital Crest. It was seen more often near the posterior margin of foramen magnum rather than at the External Occipital Protuberance as has been traditionally described. A new finding is that bilateral foramina were observed in 3 skulls (14.28%). The incidence was higher than seen in other Indian population. Since it is present near the foramen magnum in most cases, knowledge of the number and position of the foramen is important for suboccipital craniotomies. The extensive connections of the veins with cranial venous sinuses may lead to intracranial infections and vice versa.

Highlights

  • Emissary veins traverse emissary foramina of the skull and connect venous sinuses to extracranial veins

  • One single large foramen was observed on the left side of External Occipital Crest (EOC) near the External Occipital Protuberance (EOP) and the second foramen on the EOC near the Foramen Magnum (FM)

  • In 3 skulls (14.28%) foramina were observed on both sides of EOC and classified as bilateral

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Emissary veins traverse emissary foramina of the skull and connect venous sinuses to extracranial veins. They are valveless and blood may flow in both directions, flow is usually away from the brain. The emissary vein may receive the occipital diploic vein [2, 3] This traditional view has been challenged as the foramen has in the recent studies been found more often near the foramen magnum than the External Occipital Protuberance [4,5,6]. The findings of the study were correlated to possible clinical manifestations that may arise due to the position and number of emissary foramina if seen on the skull

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call