Vomeronasal cartilage
Vomeronasal cartilage | |
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Frontal section of nasal cavities of a human embryo 28 mm long. (Vomeronasal cartilage labeled at bottom left.) | |
Details | |
Identifiers | |
Latin | cartilago vomeronasalis |
TA98 | A06.1.01.016 |
TA2 | 949 |
FMA | 59514 |
Anatomical terminology [edit on Wikidata] |
The vomeronasal cartilage (or Jacobson's cartilage) is a narrow strip of cartilage, low on the medial wall of the nasal cavity. It lies between the septal nasal cartilage and the vomer. The cartilage lies below, but is not connected to, the rudimentary vomeronasal organ.[1]
Ludwig Lewin Jacobson (1783–1843), a Danish anatomist, named this structure in 1809.
References
- ^ Google books: Jacobson's cartilage: Journal of Anatomy and Physiology, Volume 32 (Griffin, 1898, pp. 710-712) - Retrieved 2018-08-27
External links
- jacobson's cartilage
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Anatomy of the human nose
- Ala of nose
- nasal cartilages
- Septal nasal
- Lateral nasal
- Major alar
- Minor alar
- Vomeronasal
Openings | |
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Lateral wall | |
Medial wall | |
Nasal mucosa |
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