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- An Inferior View of the Mylohyoid Muscle of a Male
An Inferior View of the Mylohyoid Muscle of a Male
The mylohyoid muscle as seen from below, showcasing its flat, expansive sheet forming the floor of the mouth region of the human male.
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Description
Seen from an inferior perspective, the mylohyoid forms a paired muscular diaphragm spanning the left and right halves of the floor of mouth, meeting at the midline raphe and extending posteriorly toward the hyoid region. Its fibers arise along the mylohyoid line of the mandible and run inferomedially to the raphe, with the more posterior fibers descending toward the body of the hyoid. Posterior to the mylohyoid border, the expected gap between mylohyoid and hyoglossus marks the route where the submandibular duct and lingual nerve course toward the oral cavity. Clear midline anatomy. For surgical anatomy, this underside view matters because the mylohyoid separates the sublingual space superiorly from the submandibular space inferiorly, a boundary that predicts the direction of odontogenic infection spread from mandibular molars. When infection tracks bilaterally into the submandibular space, floor-of-mouth elevation and tongue displacement can follow, the classic setup for Ludwig angina and a difficult airway. The posterior free border and its relationship to the submandibular gland, duct, and the hypoglossal nerve are also central landmarks during submandibular gland excision and transoral approaches to ranulas. Educators will find this plate well suited for head and neck anatomy teaching on suprahyoid musculature, oral cavity fascial spaces, and the functional mechanics of swallowing and speech, where mylohyoid elevation contributes to hyolaryngeal excursion. It also supports surgical atlases and ENT or oral and maxillofacial references that explain submandibular space infections, ductal anatomy, and safe dissection planes around the lingual nerve. Anatomical accuracy verified by SciePro's Medical Advisory Board.