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| | Maxilla - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | In old age the bone reverts in some measure to the infantile condition; its height is diminished, and after the loss of the teeth the alveolar process is absorbed, and the lower part of the bone contracted and reduced in thickness. |  | | Each bone consists of a body and four processes - zygomatic, frontal, alveolar, and palatine. |  | | The frontal process is well-marked and the body of the bone consists of little more than the alveolar process, the teeth sockets reaching almost to the floor of the orbit. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maxillary
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| | The axial skeleton Chapter 7 |
 | | The adult vertebral column, or spine, consists of 26 bones: the vertebrae (24), the sacrum, and the coccyx, or tailbone. |  | | The styloid process, near the base of the mastoid process, is attached to ligaments that support the hyoid bone and to the tendons of several muscles associated with the hyoid bone, the tongue, and the pharynx. |  | | A specialized joint between the occipital bone and the first vertebra of the neck stabilizes the positions of the brain and spinal cord while permitting a considerable range of head movements. |
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http://www.udayton.edu/~brahler/courses/HSS305/axial_notes.htm
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| | [No title] |
 | | 0.3 or 0.4 mm stainless steel wire is passed through the tendon or bone twice; the ends are then passed transnasally through pre-drilled holes in the opposite anterior lacrimal crest with a curved awl or curved spinal needle 7. |  | | the frontal process of the maxilla and the nasal bones should be aligned with the frontal bone and directly wired 1. |  | | Treatment A. at the time of surgery, separate repairs are performed on the skeletal framework, the medial canthus, and the lacrimal system B. in the past, closed reduction with transnasal wiring over lead plates was the standard mode of treatment C. this approach has proved unsatisfactory 1. |
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http://www.utmb.edu/oto/Grand_Rounds_Earlier.dir/Midface_Fx_1989.txt
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| | Anatomical Dictionary |
 | | Osteoderms include the scutes of crocodiles, the keeled scutes, spines, and tail-club bones of ankylosaurs, and the plates, spines, and gular ossicles of stegosaurs. |  | | MT the section of the hindfoot between the phalanges and the tarsus; in humans, the long bones of the foot (see figure 16) |  | | phx a bone in a digit of a foot; in humans, a bone in a finger or toe (see figures 15 and 16) |
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http://www.dinosauria.com/dml/anatomy.htm
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| | Glossary of Skeletal Anatomy |
 | | the bone forming the lower jaw; the largest and strongest bone of the face, presenting a body and a pair of rami, which articulate with the skull at the tempromandibular joints. |  | | the line or junction formed by a cartilaginous articulation between two bones without an intervening synovial membrane, this articulation often fuses as in the two bones and the two halves of the mandibles [compare to suture and epiphysis]. |  | | The maxillae articulate with every bone of the face except the mandible, or lower jawbone. |
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http://www.bioanth.org/biomed/anatomy.htm
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| | Bones and Joints of the Head and Neck - Self-study |
 | | articulates with the parietal bone posteriorly; zygomatic, ethmoid and sphenoid bones inferiorly; maxilla, nasal and lacrimal bones anteriorly; it is formed from two ossifications centers which normally fuse in the midline - if they do not fuse, a midline "metopic suture" is the result |  | | articulates superiorly with the perpendicular plate of the ethmoid bone and the body of the sphenoid bone; articulates inferiorly with the palatine processes of the maxilla and the horizontal plate of the palatine bone |  | | the bone of the chin; mental means relating to the mind, a reference to the act of resting the chin on the hand while thinking (see the sculpture by Rodin: "The Thinker") |
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http://anatomy.uams.edu/AnatomyHTML/bonesheadneckss.html
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| | eMedicine - Facial Bone Anatomy : Article by Babak Jahan-Parwar, MD |
 | | Anteriorly, between the orbital surfaces, the frontal bone articulates with the anterior portions of the nasal bones and frontal processes of the maxilla. |  | | They articulate with the nasal process of the frontal bone superiorly, the frontal process of the maxillary bone laterally, and with one another medially. |  | | The external surface is convex except for the superior-most portion, where a concavity forms as the margin turns superiorly to articulate with the frontal bone. |
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http://www.emedicine.com/ent/topic9.htm
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| | Tearing and Runny Eyes |
 | | Diagnosis of dacryocystitis is based on clinical signs, cultures of the lacrimal duct and on cultures and cytology (microscopic examination) of material flushed from the duct. |  | | It is difficult to correct dacryocystitis in rabbits with underlying changes of their facial bones and/or abscesses of their cheek teeth. |  | | A rabbit who has no prior history of tearing problems and has no pain, swelling or redness of its eye or area over the lacrimal sac, and no signs of infection of its eye, very often will respond to flushing of the lacrimal duct and topical medications. |
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http://www.rabbit.org/chapters/san-diego/health/vet-talk/eyes.html
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| | From the Grand Rounds Archive at Baylor |
 | | His technique is still being used today and is generally thought of as the gold standard for surgery of nasolacrimal duct obstruction. |  | | Endoscopically, you can place the scope and the laser, at which point you can obliterate the soft tissue and the bone overlying the region of the lacrimal fossa. |  | | Galenas of Pergamos was reportedly the next person to perform a surgery on the lacrimal sac. |
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http://www.bcm.edu/oto/grand/06012000.html
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| | OSL: Lacrimal Bone Thickness at the Lacrimal Sac Fossa |
 | | The authors therefore studied the thickness and the histologic type of the lacrimal bone at the lacrimal sac fossa. |  | | In most cases the lacrimal bone at the lacrimal sac fossa is so thin that it can be easily penetrated with most surgical instruments. |  | | Because laser dacryocystorhinostomy techniques have become more popular during the past few years, interest has grown concerning the anatomic structures that need to be penetrated in these procedures. |
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http://www.slackinc.com/EYE/os/stor0896/hart.htm
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| | Skull, Scalp and Superficial Face |
 | | Once you have learned some of the bones of the skull, you should then try to visualize some areas as they project to the skin. |  | | Ethmoid bone (not seen in these views (1) |  | | >Before studying the detailed anatomy of the Head and Neck, examine the following bones of the skull: |
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http://mywebpages.comcast.net/wnor/lesson1.htm
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| | Carnegie's Dinosaurs: T. rex Web Log |
 | | The surangular bone seems to be much deeper than I anticipated. |  | | I had to constantly check for cracks in the bones, especially along the edge of the surangular, and stabilize them with the Paleobond penetrant solution. |  | | The surangluar was the last bone that I had to work on of the T. |
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http://www.carnegiemuseums.org/cmnh/ditw/paleolab/rex.htm
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| | eMedicine - Fractures, Orbital : Article by Thomas Widell, MD |
 | | Lateral views are the least helpful, but if the patient is lying supine on the backboard, he or she may show air-fluid levels in the posterior of the maxillary sinus. |  | | Palpate mandible along its symphysis, body, angle, and coronoid process (anterior to ear canal) to check for tenderness, swelling, and step-off. |  | | Inferior orbital nerve courses through the maxilla in the orbital floor. |
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http://www.emedicine.com/emerg/topic202.htm
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| | Lacrimal Bones |
 | | It is knuckle-shaped, and articulates in the glenoid fossa of the temporal bone to form the temporal mandibular joint. |  | | These thin, scalelike structures are located in back of the frontal process of the maxilla. |  | | These bones are responsible for the shape of the nose. |
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http://www.tpub.com/dental1/19.htm
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| | Untitled Document |
 | | This vertebra has a foramen in each transverse process and a long and prominent spinous process, but no articular facets on the transverse processes. |  | | The olecranon process would be found on the [Hint] |  | | The crista galli is a projection from which bone? |
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http://www.justcallbob.com/Anatomy/Skeleton/mc.htm
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| | II. Osteology. 5a. 6. Ethmoid bone. Gray, Henry. 1918. Anatomy of the Human Body. |
 | | Its anterior border, short and thick, articulates with the frontal bone, and presents two small projecting alæ, which are received into corresponding depressions in the frontal bone and complete the foramen cecum. |  | | The anterior border articulates with the spine of the frontal bone and the crest of the nasal bones. |  | | In the disarticulated bone many of these cells are opened into, but when the bones are articulated, they are closed in at every part, except where they open into the nasal cavity. |
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http://www.bartleby.com/107/36.html
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| | THE FUNCTION AND EVOLUTION OF THE SUPRAORBITAL PROCESS IN DUCKS |
 | | THE anterior margin of the orbit in ducks is formed by the lacrimal bone, which articulates with the anterolateral margin of the frontal bone and the posterodorsal corner of the maxillary process of the nasal bone. |  | | In some forms this tubercle has become elongated to form a stout, finger-like projection, the supraorbital process. |  | | Naturalist, 80: 316, 1968), whose terminology for the parts of the lacrimal bone is followed here. |
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http://elibrary.unm.edu/sora/Auk/v087n03/p0568-p0572.html
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| | [No title] |
 | | Infection may extend to the anterior surface of the frontal bone. |  | | ANATOMY OF THE ORBIT A. Frontal Bone 2. |  | | Intravenous antibiotics are continued for 1 week after drainage, osteomyelitis requires much longer therapy, bone scan may be helpful. |
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http://www.utmb.edu/oto/Grand_Rounds_Earlier.dir/Orbital_Infections_1989.txt
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| | [No title] |
 | | On the anteromedial side of the roof is a small spine which represent the attachment of the trochlea (pulley) through which the superior oblique muscle will run. |  | | Medial: The medial side of the wall is formed largely by the orbital surface of the ethmoid bone. |  | | Anterior to this is the small lacrimal bone in which is a small concavity, the fossa for the lacrimal sac. |
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http://students.washington.edu/marafie/HeadNeckViva/H3B.doc
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| | IngentaConnect The anatomy of the lacrimal bone at the lateral wall of the nose:... |
 | | This study shows that the uncinate process is a reliable landmark for the lacrimal bone in endoscopic nasal surgery. |  | | The anatomy of the lacrimal bone at the lateral wall of the nose: its significance to the lacrimal surgeon |  | | IngentaConnect The anatomy of the lacrimal bone at the lateral wall of the nose:... |
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http://api.ingentaconnect.com/content/bsc/cotol/1999/00000024/00000004/art00235
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| | Dissector Answers - Eye |
 | | Semilunar fold: the edge of the lacrimal caruncle narrows out to form a thin fold of skin |  | | The lacrimal part of orbicularis oculi arises from the lateral wall of the lacrimal sac and the bone posterior to it. |  | | What is the action of the lacrimal portion of the orbicularis oculi muscle? |
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http://anatomy.med.umich.edu/nervous_system/eye_ans.html
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| | Dorlands Medical Dictionary |
 | | of temporal bone sulcus sinus sigmoidei ossis temporalis. |  | | for lateral sinus of parietal bone sulcus sinus sigmoidei ossis parietalis. |  | | for lateral sinus of occipital bone sulcus sinus transversi. |
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http://www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_hl_dorlands.jspzQzpgzEzzSzppdocszSzuszSzcommonzSzdorlandszSzdorlandzSzdmd_b_18zPzhtm
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| | [No title] |
 | | Medial--formed by the maxillary bone, the lacrimal bone and the ethmoid bone Lateral--formed by the zygomatic bone and the greater wing of sphenoid Superior--formed by the frontal bone Inferior--Formed by the maxillary bone Posterior--Formed by the greater wing of the sphenoid bone 2. |  | | The lacus lacrimalis (lacrimal lake) is the area of the conjunctive between the medial margins of the eyelids at the inner angle. |  | | Pulsations of this muscle create pressure changes which assists in the collection of tears by the lacrimal canaliculi. |
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http://www.med.unc.edu/~kimplera/classes/anatomy/hn9.doc
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| | eMedicine - Nasolacrimal System Anatomy : Article by Bobbie Parwar, MD |
 | | The lacrimal bone can be localized intranasally by its position, which is anterior to the uncinate process of the ethmoid bone. |  | | Because the lacrimal bone is generally thinner than the maxillary bone, during dacryocystorhinostomy a perforation of the lacrimal bone can be made, followed by extension of the osteotomy to include the maxillary bone. |  | | The lacrimal sac sits within the lacrimal fossa, which is bound anteriorly by the frontal process of the maxillary bone (anterior lacrimal crest) and posteriorly by the lacrimal bone (posterior lacrimal crest). |
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http://www.emedicine.com/ent/topic5.htm
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| | Lacrimal bone |
 | | It articulates with the frontal bone and ethmoid bones and the maxilla and inferior concha. |  | | a thin, scale-like bone at the anterior part of the medial wall of the orbit. |  | | Search marked text (mark text before you click) |
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http://www.amershamhealth.com/medcyclopaedia/Volume%20II/lacrimal%20bone.html
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| | GROSS ANATOMY EXAM #3: 1994 |
 | | As the nasociliary nerve passes through the superior orbital fissure, some of its fibers have their cell bodies in the ciliary ganglion. |  | | all of the above are bones of the lateral nasal wall |  | | Which of the following bones DOES NOT make up the lateral nasal wall? |
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http://medschool.slu.edu/ms2001/Ae394.html
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| | Visuals Unlimited Stock Photography: Painted human skull viewed from the left side: maxilla (peach), nasal bone (light ... |
 | | Painted human skull viewed from the left side: maxilla (peach), nasal bone (light purplelilac), lacrimal bone for the tear gland and duct (brown), zygomatic bone (light blue), sphenoid bone (dark blue), mandible or jaw (white), frontal bone (yellow), temporal bone (light red, center), parietal bone (dark red), and occipital bone (goldorange). |  | | Visuals Unlimited Stock Photography: Painted human skull viewed from the left side: maxilla (peach), nasal bone (light purplelilac), lacrimal bone for the tear gland and duct (brown), zygomatic bone (light blue), sphenoid bone (dark blue), mandible or jaw (white), frontal bone (yellow), temporal bone (light red, center), parietal bone (dark red), and occipital bone (goldorange). |
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http://www.visualsunlimited.com/browse/vu451/vu451341.html
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| | lacrimal bone - definition of lacrimal bone in General |
 | | lacrimal bone - definition of lacrimal bone in General |  | | lacrimal bone - small fragile bone making up part of the front inner walls of each eye socket and providing room for the passage of the lacrimal ducts |  | | Embed a dictionary search in your own web page |
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http://dictionary.laborlawtalk.com/lacrimal_bone
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| | lacrimal bone : Definition from the Online Dictionary at Datasegment.com |
 | | 1 definition found lacrimal bone - WordNet (r) 2.0 (August 2003) : lacrimal bone n : small fragile bone making up part of the front inner walls of each eye socket and providing room for the passage of the lacrimal ducts |  | | lacrimal bone : Definition from the Online Dictionary at Datasegment.com |
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http://onlinedictionary.datasegment.com/word/lacrimal+bone
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| | lacrimal bone |
 | | a small, thin, membrane bone forming the front part of the inner wall of each orbit. |
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http://www.factmonster.com/ipd/A0508998.html
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| | LACRIMAL BONE Meaning and Definition - Dictionary - eLook.org |
 | | [noun] small fragile bone making up part of the front inner walls of each eye socket and providing room for the passage of the lacrimal ducts |  | | LACRIMAL BONE Meaning and Definition - Dictionary - eLook.org |
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http://www.elook.org/dictionary/lacrimal-bone.html
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| | Skull |
 | | 46 **** Pyramid (petros portion of temporal bone) |  | | 10 **** Superior maxilla, upper jawbone superior maxillary bone |  | | Go Back to the AID TO THE DSM INSTRUCTOR PAGE AID. |
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http://www.uvi.edu/SandM/skull.htm
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| | lacrimal bone- WordWeb dictionary definition |
 | | Small fragile bone making up part of the front inner walls of each eye socket and providing room for the passage of the lacrimal ducts |  | | Part of: cranial orbit, eye socket, orbit, orbital cavity |
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http://www.annlewis.net/en/LACRIMALBONE
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| | [No title] |
 | | 11, 2001 EYE --Superior/inferior palpebral conjuctiva Tarsal (meibomian) glands) Lacrimal punctum Sclera, iris, pupil, cornea Frontal & maxillary sinus Levator palpebrae superioris muscle Superior/inferior rectus m. |
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http://www.muhealth.org/~md2004/update3/1-9anatomy.doc
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