A 38 year-old male presents to the E.D. with a swollen left eye. He denies any trauma to the eye. He does report, initially, having a headache \x93on the top of my head.\x94 He now has a generalized headache, fevers, pain behind his eye, and if you open his eyelid he reports double vision. On exam, the patient appears ill with obvious ptosis, proptosis, and inability to track with his left eye during extra-ocular muscle testing. He has hyperesthesia on the skin of his left face, from the forehead to just above the mandible. His fundoscopic exam displays papilledema.
Discuss the anatomy of the cavernous sinus. Include boundaries, contents, and relationships. What symptoms are caused by damage to the structures and cranial nerve functional components within the cavernous sinus? (12 pts)
- The cavernous is a venous blood sinus (not an air sinus) created by divergent layers of endosteal and meningeal dura. It is located in the middle cranial fossa adjacent to the sella turcica. Immediately medial to the thin lateral border of the sella turcica is the sphenoid air sinus. This relationship puts the cavernous sinus at risk during transsphenoidal surgery of the hypophysis. Five of the 12 cranial nerves have components at risk during pathology of the cavernous sinus.
Bones
- Sella turcica -
- Greater wing of the sphenoid bone -
- Lesser wind of the sphenoid bone -
- Apex of the petrous temporal bone
- Anterior and posterior clinoid processes -
Boundaries and external relationships
- Superior -
- Inferior -
- Anterior -
- Posterior -
- Medial -
- Lateral -
Contents, internal relationships, functional components, and expected clinical symptoms
- Internal carotid artery -
- Internal carotid plexus -
- Sympathetic root of the ciliary ganglion -
- Deep petrosal nerve -
- Greater superficial petrosal nerve -
- Nerve of the pterygoid canal (Vidian nerve) -
- Oculomotor nerve (and branches) -
- Trochlear nerve -
- Ophthalmic nerve (V1) and branches -
- Maxillary nerve (V2) -
- Abducens nerve -
- Inferior hypophyseal artery
Vascularization
- Hypophyseal arteries -
- Ophthalmic vein -
- Sphenoparietal sinus -
- Superior petrosal sinus -
- Inferior petrosal sinus -
- Emissary vein to pterygoid venous plexus -
- Intercavernous sinus sinus -
Innervation
- Meningeal branches of maxillary and mandibular nerves -
Routes of Infection
- Face and Orbit -
- Scalp -
- Infratemporal fossa -
- Ischiorectal fossa and internel vertebral venous plexus -
- Base of skull and external vertebral venous plexus -
- Intercavernous sinus -