Skip to content

Histological examination of the human obliquus capitis inferior myodural bridge

Matthew E Pontella, Frank Scali, Dennis E Enix, Patrick J Battaglia, Ewarld Marshall
Key takeaways
  1. 01A connective tissue bridge links the OCI muscle to the dura mater
  2. 02This "myodural bridge" was confirmed at the microscopic level
  3. 03Nerve fibers were found within this connective tissue bridge
  4. 04This connection may play a role in both normal function and pain conditions

A connective tissue bridge containing nerve fibers directly links the deep suboccipital muscle obliquus capitis inferior to the spinal cord's protective covering.

Abstract

This study was designed to examine the anatomical relationship between the obliquus capitis inferior (OCI) muscle and the cervical dura mater at the histological level. Eight human cadavers, with an average age of 65 ± 7.9 years were selected from a convenience sample for suboccipital dissection. Twelve OCI muscle specimens were excised, 100% of which emitted grossly visible soft tissue tracts that inserted into the posterolateral aspect of the cervical dura. These 12 myodural specimens were excised as single, continuous structures and sent for H&E staining. One sample also underwent immuno-peroxidase staining. Microscopic evaluation confirmed a connective tissue bridge emanating from the OCI muscular body and attaching to the posterolateral aspect of the cervical dura mater in 75% of the specimens. Microtome slices of the remaining 25% were not able to capture muscle, connective tissue and dura within the same plane and were therefore unable to be properly analyzed. The sample sent for neuro-analysis stained positively for several neuronal fascicles traveling within, and passing through the OCI myodural bridge. This study histologically confirms the presence of a connective tissue bridge that links the OCI muscle to the dura mater and the presence of neuronal tissue within this connection warrants further examination. This structure may represent a component of normal human anatomy. In addition to its hypothetical role in human homeostasis, it may contribute to certain neuropathological conditions, as well.

Cite this study
APA
Matthew E Pontella, Frank Scali, Dennis E Enix, Patrick J Battaglia, & Ewarld Marshall (2013). Histological examination of the human obliquus capitis inferior myodural bridge. https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/histological-examination-of-the-human-obliquus-capitis-inferior-myodural-bridge/
MLA
Matthew E Pontella, et al. "Histological examination of the human obliquus capitis inferior myodural bridge." 2013, https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/histological-examination-of-the-human-obliquus-capitis-inferior-myodural-bridge/.
Chicago
Matthew E Pontella et al. 2013. "Histological examination of the human obliquus capitis inferior myodural bridge.". https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/histological-examination-of-the-human-obliquus-capitis-inferior-myodural-bridge/