Anterior tympanic artery

Anterior tympanic artery

Branches of maxillary artery
(anterior tympanic artery at upper left)

Branches of the maxillary artery
Details
Latin Arteria tympanica anterior
Supplies Middle ear
Identifiers
Gray's p.560
Dorlands
/Elsevier
a_61/12156441
TA A12.2.05.055
FMA 49692
Anatomical terminology

The anterior tympanic artery (glaserian artery) is a small artery in the head that supplies the middle ear. It usually arises as a branch of the first part of the maxillary artery.[1] It passes upward behind the temporomandibular articulation, enters the tympanic cavity through the petrotympanic fissure, and ramifies upon the tympanic membrane, forming a vascular circle around the membrane with the stylomastoid branch of the posterior auricular, and anastomosing with the artery of the pterygoid canal and with the caroticotympanic branch from the internal carotid.

Notes

  1. Human Anatomy.

References

This article incorporates text in the public domain from the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)

External links