Orbital plate

Lamina orbitalis

  • Related terms: Orbital plate of ethmoid bone

Definition

The orbital plate (Lamina orbitale) is a part of the papery blade of the lateral mass of the ethmoid bone.

This papery plate surrounds all the volutes; it is connected by its periphery to the internal plate of the neighboring bones and forms the rear wall of the cavity of the nose.

Extremely thin and delicate (as a thin paper, hence its name), it can even be missing in certain points and be replaced by the table of one of the neighboring bones.

In Men, it is reduced to its lateral part, leaned against the orbit, and it takes part to form its medial wall: it is the orbital plate (Lamina orbitalis) -formerly called 'os planum' or 'papery blade'.

In domestic Mammals, it is continued dorsally and ventrally on the medial side to reach the perpendicular plate and attach to it; the part that passes dorsally, forming a kind of roof above the volutes is the tectorial plate or lamina tectoria; the one that passes ventrally and forms the ethmoidal floor is the basal plate or lamina basalis.

References

Anatomie comparée des mammifère domestiques - 5th edition - Robert Barone - Vigot

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