Hyoglossus

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Hyoglossus
Hyoglossus.png
Extrinsic muscles of the tongue. Left side. (Hyoglossus visible at center.)
Hyoglossal muscle.PNG
Muscles of the neck. Anterior view. Hyoglossal muscle in purple
Details
Latin musculus hyoglossus
Origin Hyoid
Insertion side of the tongue
Hypoglossal (CN XII)
Actions depresses and retracts the tongue
Identifiers
Dorlands
/Elsevier
m_22/12549261
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Anatomical terms of muscle
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The Hyoglossus, thin and quadrilateral, arises from the side of the body and from the whole length of the greater cornu of the hyoid bone, and passes almost vertically upward to enter the side of the tongue, between the Styloglossus and Longitudinalis inferior. It forms a part of the floor of Submandibular triangle.

Structure

The fibers arising from the body of the hyoid bone overlap those from the greater cornu.

Structures that are medial/deep to the hyoglossus are the glossopharyngeal nerve (9th Cranial nerve), the stylohyoid ligament and the lingual artery & vein.

The lingual vein passes medial to the hyoglossus, and the lingual artery passes deep to the hyoglossus. Laterally, in between the hyoglossus muscle and the mylohyoid muscle lay several important structures (from superior in inferior): sublingual gland, submandibular duct, lingual nerve, vena comitans of hypoglossal nerve, and the hypoglossal nerve. Note, posteriorly, the lingual nerve is superior to the submandibular duct and a portion of the submandibular salivary gland protrudes into the space between the hyoglossus and mylohyoid muscles.

Function

The hyoglossus depresses and retracts the tongue and makes the dorsum more convex.

Additional images

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References

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

External links