Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/1376
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Type: Journal article
Title: Comparative anatomy of the buccinator muscle in cat (Felis domestica)
Author: Tomo, S.
Tomo, I.
Nakajima, K.
Townsend, G.
Hirata, K.
Citation: Anatomical Record, 2002; 267(1):78-86
Publisher: Wiley-Liss
Issue Date: 2002
ISSN: 1552-4906
0003-276X
Statement of
Responsibility: 
Soichiro Tomo, Ikuko Tomo, Koh Nakajima, Grant C. Townsend, and Kazuaki Hirata
Abstract: Published descriptions of the buccinator muscle of the cat (Felis domestica) differ from those for the same muscle in other mammals. Only an oral component of the muscle has been described in cats, not a buccal part. The purpose of this study was to identify the buccinator muscle in the cat and report on its anatomical features in detail. Dissections of the facial muscles were carried out on 12 specimens of adult cats (6 males and 6 females) that had been fixed with 10% formalin. We then observed the facial muscles and traced their innervations, arteries, and veins under a binocular microscope. The buccinator muscle in the cat was identified underneath an orbicularis oris, arising from the lower buccal membrane and from the molar region of the alveolar border of the mandible. It was about 3 mm wide at its origin, 4 mm wide at its insertion, and about 11 mm in length from origin to insertion. This contrasts with humans, in whom the muscle arises not only from the mandible, but also from the maxilla. Apart from this difference, this muscle in cats displays the following similarities to the buccinator muscle of other mammals: 1) it is innervated by the facial nerve; 2) it supports the buccal membrane; 3) it seems to insert into the modiolus; 4) its bundles run antero-posteriorly; 5) the posterior part of the muscle is located medially to the masseter muscle; 6) the parotid duct, facial nerve, artery, and vein run lateral to the muscle; 7) it is located deeper than other facial muscles; and 8) the buccal nerve runs on its surface. These relationships are spatially similar to those of the buccinator muscle in mammals. This muscle may aid in mastication, including suckling, and in expelling air forcibly, like the buccinator in humans.
Keywords: Facial Muscles
Masticatory Muscles
Animals
Cats
Humans
Dissection
Species Specificity
Mastication
Female
Male
Description: Published in Anatomical Record, 2002; 267 (1):78-86 at www.interscience.wiley.com
DOI: 10.1002/ar.10090
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ar.10090
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest 2
Dentistry publications

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