RT Journal Article T1 Human fetal hyoid body origin revisited A1 Rodríguez Vázquez, José Francisco A1 Kim, Ji Hyun A1 Verdugo López, Samuel A1 Murakami, Gen A1 Cho, Kwang Ho A1 Asakawa, S A1 Abe, Sin Ichi AB The hyoid body is traditionally believed to have a dual origin from second and third arch mesenchyme, but this theory remains controversial. We examined paraffin-embedded sections from the hyoid region of 12 embryos and fetuses at 5-7 weeks of gestation (11-22 mm cranio-rump length). We found that the second (Reichert's cartilage) and third arch mesenchymal condensations did not reach the median area at the base of the tongue. Rather, a midline mesenchymal condensation was seen, and it separated from these arches at an early stage. This condensation was triangular and plate-like, and the cranial part was narrow between the bilateral Reichert's cartilages, while the caudal part was wide along the mediolateral axis between the bilateral primitive greater horns. We considered the midline mesenchymal condensation as the hyoid body anlage. At 7 weeks, a cartilaginous mass appeared in the midline condensation. The hypoglossal nerve changed its direction at the superolateral ends of the midline condensation. We propose that: (i) the hyoid body originates from the hypobranchial eminence via the midline condensation; (ii) the lesser horn originates from the caudal end of Reichert's cartilage; and (iii) the greater horn of the hyoid and the superior cornu of the thyroid cartilage originate from the third arch cartilage. The second and third arches may not regulate early hyoid body morphology. PB Wiley SN 0021-8782 YR 2011 FD 2011-08 LK https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/95887 UL https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/95887 LA eng NO Rodríguez-Vázquez JF, Kim JH, Verdugo-López S, Murakami G, Cho KH, Asakawa S, Abe S. Human fetal hyoid body origin revisited. Journal of Anatomy. 2011 Aug;219(2):143-9 DS Docta Complutense RD 6 oct 2024