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Suprahyoid Spaces of the Head and Neck

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This is a diagram of the various

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spaces of the suprahyoid neck.

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What you see on this diagram are the masticator space

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seen here enclosing the muscles of mastication,

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the parotid space, the PS,

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the parapharyngeal space.

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And when we say parapharyngeal space,

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we're talking about the prestyloid parapharyngeal space,

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the retropharyngeal space, which is the RPS here,

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the pharyngeal mucosal space,

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and the perivertebral space.

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And all these spaces are defined by layers

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of the deep cervical fascia.

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You notice here is our area of interest,

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which is the carotid space.

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It has all three layers of the deep cervical fascia.

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It has the superficial portion,

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which is the investing fascia.

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It has the pretracheal middle portion of the deep

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cervical fascia, the pretracheal fascia,

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and it has the prevertebral fascia,

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which is the deep layer of the deep cervical fascia.

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And these fascial linings contain pathology

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within the various spaces.

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As we have discussed previously in

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the Suprahyoid Space lectures,

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the displacement of the prestyloid parapharyngeal fat

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will help define in what space a lesion is in.

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In the carotid space,

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we have displacement of the prestyloid

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parapharyngeal fat anteriorly.

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Here you see the carotid space lesion and we notice

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that this dark tissue, the fatty tissue,

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is the prestyloid parapharyngeal space and we see that it

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is displaced anteriorly by the lesion compared to the

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normal positioning of the prestyloid

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parapharyngeal space.

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Now when we use this term styloid,

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prestyloid or post-styloid parapharyngeal space,

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what are we referring to?

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On CT, the best thing that we can see is the styloid process

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and therefore, a lesion that is behind the styloid

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process is usually in the post-styloid parapharyngeal

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space or the carotid space,

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whereas those lesions that are in front of that styloid

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process are in the prestyloid parapharyngeal space,

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which is mostly fat.

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So this lesion is displacing this styloid

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process slightly anteriorly.

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In MR, we often do not see the styloid process

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because it's a piece of bone and therefore dark on the MR signal.

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What we see and what we use in MR

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are the styloid musculature,

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which sit superficial to the carotid space or

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the posterior belly of the digastric muscle,

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which is the intermediate density tissue

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that you're seeing on the CT scan.

Report

Description

Faculty

David M Yousem, MD, MBA

Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean

Johns Hopkins University

Tags

Neuroradiology

Neuro

Neoplastic

Head and Neck

CT

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