Skip to content

The universal existence of myodural bridge in mammals: an indication of a necessary function

Nan Zheng, Xiao-Ying Yuan, Yan-Yan Chi, Pei Liu, Bing Wang, Jia-Ying Sui, Seung-Ho Han, Sheng-Bo Yu, Hong-Jin Sui
Key takeaways
  1. 01A fibrous "myodural bridge" connects a suboccipital muscle to the spinal dura
  2. 02This study confirmed its existence in five different orders of mammals
  3. 03The structure appears to be evolutionarily conserved across species
  4. 04Its universal existence suggests the bridge performs a necessary physiological function

The connection between a suboccipital muscle and the spinal dura appears to be a universal feature in mammals, suggesting a necessary function.

Abstract

The “myodural bridge” was described in literatures as a dense fbrous tissue connecting the sub-occipital musculature with the spinal dura mater in human studies. Now the concept of “myodural bridge” was perceived as an exact anatomical structure presumably essential for critical physiological functions in human body, and might exist in other mammals as well. To determine the existence of the “myodural bridge” in other mammals and to lay a foundation for the functional study, we examined representatives in fve diferent mammalian orders. Based on the anatomical dissections, P45 plastinated sections and histological sections, we found that a dense fbrous tissue connected the rectus capitisdorsalis minor and the spinal dura mater through the dorsal atlanto-occipital interspace with or without the medium of the posterior atlanto-occipital membrane. These observed connective tissues were very similar to the “myodural bridge” previously described in humans. We proposed that the “myodural bridge”, as an evolutionally conserved structure, presents in many other mammals. Moreover, we believed that the “myodural bridge” might be a homologous organ in mammals. Thus, this study could provide an insight for our understanding the physiological signifcance of the “myodural bridge”, especially in human.

Cite this study
APA
Nan Zheng, Xiao-Ying Yuan, Yan-Yan Chi, Pei Liu, Bing Wang, Jia-Ying Sui, Seung-Ho Han, Sheng-Bo Yu, & Hong-Jin Sui (2017). The universal existence of myodural bridge in mammals: an indication of a necessary function. https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/the-universal-existence-of-myodural-bridge-in-mammals-an-indication-of-a-necessary-function/
MLA
Nan Zheng, et al. "The universal existence of myodural bridge in mammals: an indication of a necessary function." 2017, https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/the-universal-existence-of-myodural-bridge-in-mammals-an-indication-of-a-necessary-function/.
Chicago
Nan Zheng et al. 2017. "The universal existence of myodural bridge in mammals: an indication of a necessary function.". https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/the-universal-existence-of-myodural-bridge-in-mammals-an-indication-of-a-necessary-function/