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Parietal Bones

Parietal Bones

Osteology

The parietal bone is a flat, quadrilateral, curved bone that forms the roof and sides of the vault of skull.

Surfaces


Outer Surface

The outer surface is smooth and convex, and presents the following features:

  • Parietal tuber/eminence: It refers to the area of maximum convexity of the parietal bone.
  • Parietal foramen: It lies near the posterior end of sagittal suture, 2.5-4 cm in front of lambda.
  • Temporal lines: The inferior temporal line gives origin to the temporalis muscle, and the superior temporal line provides origin to the temporal fascia.

External surface of parietal bone showing parts, borders and features.

Source: Henry Gray (1918) Anatomy of the Human Body

Inner Surface

The inner surface is concave and presents the following features:

  • Sagittal sulcus: It is a shallow depression/groove found along the superior border, and houses/lodges the superior sagittal sinus.
  • Granular foveolae (Arachnoid foveolae): These are bony depressions or pits found near the sagittal sulcus, along the length of the superior sagittal sinus. These are formed by adjacent arachnoid granulations.
  • Grooves for middle meningeal vessels: The grooves for anterior and posterior divisions of middle meningeal vessels run upwards and backwards, and start from the anteroinferior angle and inferior border respectively.
  • Sigmoid sulcus (Transverse sulcus): It is a groove present across the posteroinferior/mastoid angle, formed by the continuation of the groove of the transverse sinus.

Inner surface of Parietal bone with features

Source: Henry Gray (1918) Anatomy of the Human Body

Borders


  • Superior/sagittal border: It articulates with the opposite parietal bone, forming the sagittal suture.

  • Inferior/Squamous border: It articulates with the sphenoid and temporal bones, forming the

    • Sphenoparietal suture: Between the anterior part of inferior border and greater wing of sphenoid bone.
    • Squamous suture: With the squamous part of temporal bone.
    • Parietomastoid suture: Between the posterior part of inferior border and the mastoid part of temporal bone.
  • Anterior/Frontal border: It articulates with the frontal border, along the coronal suture.

  • Posterior/Occipital border: It articulates with the occipital bone, forming the lambdoid suture.

Angles


Anterosuperior/Frontal angle

  • It forms the meeting point of sagittal and coronal suture (bregma).
  • In the fetal skull, it presents as the anterior fontanelle, that closes by 18-24 months of age.

Anteroinferior/Sphenoidal angle

  • It presents the junction of four bones (frontal, parietal, temporal, sphenoid) that forms an H-shaped landmark known as pterion.
  • It is the site of anterolateral/sphenoidal fontanelle.

Posterosuperior/Occipital angle

  • It is the meeting point of sagittal and lambdoid sutures (lambda).
  • In the fetal skull, it is the site of posterior fontanelle that closes at 2-3 months of age.

Posteroinferior/Mastoid angle

  • It presents the junction of occipital, temporal and parietal bones, known as asterion.
  • In the fetal skull, it is the site of posterolateral/mastoid fontanelle (closes by 12 months of age).

Anatomical Position


In the anatomical position, the parietal bone is held at the anteroinferior angle with the sagittal suture

  • Side determination: The external surface is convex and smooth, while the inner surface is concave and shows vascular markings.
  • Anterior-posterior positioning: The anteroinferior angle is pointed, while the posteroinferior angle is truncated. Also, the anteroinferior angle shows grooves for anterior division of middle meningeal vessels (directed backwards).
  • The inferior border is curved, while the superior border is straight.

Applied Anatomy


  • The parietal eminence is the site of ossification center where intramembranous ossification of parietal bone starts.
  • In ultrasonography (USG), biparietal diameter measurement is used for determination of fetal age.
  • The anteroinferior angle or pterion overlies the middle meningeal vessels, and any trauma in this region can cause extradural haemorrhage.
  • The degree of tenseness of the anterior fontanelle membrane gives an index of intracranial pressure. A swelling of the fontanelle indicates an increase in intracranial pressure, while, depression indicates dehydration (insufficiency of body fluids).
  • The parietal bone primarily protects the parietal lobe, which is associated with sensory processing and spatial functions, and it partially overlaps areas involved in sensory speech processing (Wernicke's area).

References


*This article is an excerpt from the above mentioned sources and Medical Sutras does not make any ownership or affiliation claims.