| Literature DB >> 26501961 |
Grzegorz Wysiadecki1, Michał Polguj2, Mirosław Topol3.
Abstract
This study reports the first case of abducens nerve duplication along its entire intracranial course, ending within the orbit. A distinct abducens nerve duplication reaching the common tendinous ring (annulus of Zinn), as well as another split within the intraconal segment of the nerve have been revealed. Additionally, two groups (superior and inferior) of abducens nerve sub-branches to the lateral rectus muscle were visualised using Sihler's stain. The analysed anatomical variation has never been reported before and it seems to be in the middle of the spectrum between the cases of duplication occurring only within the intracranial segments of the abducens nerve found in the literature and those continuing throughout the whole course of the nerve. Abducens nerve duplication may be treated as a relic of early stages of ontogenesis. Such a variant might result from alternative developmental pathways in which axons of the abducens nerve, specific for a given segment of the lateral rectus muscle, run separately at some stage, instead of forming a single stem.Entities:
Keywords: Abducens nerve; Cranial nerve development; Lateral rectus innervation pattern; Variations
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26501961 PMCID: PMC4911371 DOI: 10.1007/s00276-015-1573-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Surg Radiol Anat ISSN: 0930-1038 Impact factor: 1.246
Summary of the results of measurements performed for both trunks of the duplicated abducens nerve
| Measured feature (mm) | DE-PCP | DE-TG | DE-IAO | Diameter (within subarachnoid space) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lateral trunk | 19.2 | 4.3 | 19.3 | 0.72 |
| Medial trunk | 19.7 | 6.8 | 20.5 | 0.84 |
DE-PCP distance between the dural entry point of an individual trunk of the duplicated abducens nerve and the apex of the posterior clinoid process, DE-TG distance between the dural entry point of an individual trunk of the duplicated abducens nerve and the inferior border of the trigeminal porus (the trigeminal nerve entrance to Meckel’s cave), DE-IAO distance between the dural entrance of an individual trunk of the duplicated abducens nerve and the central part of the internal acoustic opening
Fig. 1The course and innervation pattern of the duplicated abducens nerve. a Intracranial segments. The clival dura mater and the lateral wall of the cavernous sinus were removed. The main branches of the cavernous segment of the internal carotid artery were carefully removed during the dissection in order to better visualise the course of the abducens nerve. White arrowhead internal carotid plexus. b Intraorbital segments. A lateral incision of the common tendinous ring exposed the point where both trunks of the duplicated abducens nerve merged. Black arrowhead the site of fusion of both trunks of the duplicated abducens nerve. c Isolated lateral rectus muscle specimen. The inner surface of the muscle was visualised along with the abducens nerve sub-branches reaching it. Black arrowhead the site of fusion of both trunks of the duplicated abducens nerve. d Intramuscular innervation pattern of the lateral rectus muscle. Sihler’s staining. View of the internal muscle surface. A slight deformation of the muscle results from the technological process of staining. Grey arrowhead short ‘split’ within intraconal segment of the abducens nerve. A anterior, P posterior, I inferior, S superior, II optic nerve, VI single trunk (intraconal segment) of the abducens nerve, VI’ medial trunk of the duplicated abducens nerve, VI” lateral trunk of the duplicated abducens nerve, CG ciliary ganglion, CTR common tendinous ring, ICA internal carotid artery, ILT origin of the inferolateral trunk, LR lateral rectus muscle, LR’ insertion of the lateral rectus, MHT origin of the meningohypophyseal trunk, PLL petrolingual ligament, SR superior rectus muscle, Inf sub-branches to the inferior compartment of the lateral rectus, Sup sub-branches to the superior compartment of the lateral rectus
Fig. 2Variants of abducens nerve duplication along with a schematic illustration of its course within individual nerve segments