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Craniovascular traits and braincase morphology in craniosynostotic human skulls

Middle meningeal vessels, dural venous sinuses, and emissary veins leave imprints and canals in the endocranium, and thus provide evidence of vascular patterns in osteological samples. This paper investigates whether craniovascular morphology undergoes changes in craniosynostotic human skulls, and i...

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Published in:Journal of anatomy 2021-11, Vol.239 (5), p.1050-1065
Main Authors: Eisová, Stanislava, Naňka, Ondřej, Velemínský, Petr, Bruner, Emiliano
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Middle meningeal vessels, dural venous sinuses, and emissary veins leave imprints and canals in the endocranium, and thus provide evidence of vascular patterns in osteological samples. This paper investigates whether craniovascular morphology undergoes changes in craniosynostotic human skulls, and if specific alterations may reflect structural and functional relationships in the cranium. The analyzed osteological sample consists of adult individuals with craniosynostoses generally associated with dolichocephalic or brachycephalic proportions, and a control sample of anatomically normal adult skulls. The pattern and dominance of the middle meningeal artery, the morphology of the confluence of the sinuses, and the size and number of the emissary foramina were evaluated. Craniovascular morphology was more diverse in craniosynostotic skulls than in anatomically normal skulls. The craniosynostotic skulls often displayed enlarged occipito‐marginal sinuses and more numerous emissary foramina. The craniosynostotic skulls associated with more brachycephalic morphology often presented enlarged emissary foramina, while the craniosynostotic skulls associated with dolichocephalic effects frequently displayed more developed posterior branches of the middle meningeal artery. The course and morphology of the middle meningeal vessels, dural venous sinuses, and emissary veins in craniosynostotic skulls can be related to the redistribution of growth forces, higher intracranial pressure, venous hypertension, or thermal constraints. These functional and structural changes are of interest in both anthropology and medicine, involving epigenetic traits that concern the functional and ontogenetic balance between soft and hard tissues. Middle meningeal vessels, dural venous sinuses and emissary veins leave imprints and canals in the endocranium, and thus provide evidence of vascular patterns in osteological samples. This study explores how the craniovascular morphology changes in craniosynostotic skulls, and whether the alterations reflect structural and functional relationships in the cranium.
ISSN:0021-8782
1469-7580
1469-7580
DOI:10.1111/joa.13506