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- A Lateral Perspective of the Zygomaticotemporal Nerve of a Human Male
A Lateral Perspective of the Zygomaticotemporal Nerve of a Human Male
The zygomaticotemporal nerve depicted from a lateral angle, showing its superior course toward the temporal fossa of the male head.
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Description
Seen in left lateral profile, the zygomaticotemporal nerve is traced as a cutaneous branch of the maxillary nerve (V2) emerging in relation to the zygomatic bone and coursing superiorly toward the temporal fossa. Its path runs deep to the lateral orbital region and then ascends over the zygomatic arch toward the anterior temple, where it supplies skin sensation. Surrounding context includes the temporalis muscle occupying the temporal fossa, the zygomaticus muscle group over the malar eminence, and the sternocleidomastoid descending posteroinferiorly in the neck. Orientation is clear. This lateral perspective matters because the zygomaticotemporal nerve sits at a crossroads for facial pain patterns and surgical planes around the orbit and zygoma, where V2 branches can be irritated by trauma, scarring, or entrapment at foramina and fascial apertures. During zygomaticomaxillary complex fracture repair, temporal fossa dissection, or coronal approaches that elevate scalp and temporalis, recognizing the nerve’s superior course helps explain postoperative temple numbness and helps avoid iatrogenic injury. Small nerve, real symptoms. Use this plate in gross anatomy and head and neck neuroanatomy teaching to reinforce trigeminal sensory territories and the distinction between V2 cutaneous branches and nearby facial nerve motor branches to the mimetic musculature. It also suits maxillofacial surgery texts, pain medicine references on trigeminal neuropathies, and clinical patient education on temple paresthesia after orbital or zygomatic procedures. Anatomical accuracy verified by SciePro's Medical Advisory Board.