Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/47074
Title: Anatomic and magnetic resonance imaging features of the salivary glands in the dog
Authors: Gil Cano,Francisco 
Arencibia Espinosa, Alberto 
García, Verónica
Ramírez Zarzosa, Gregorio José
Vázquez Autón,José Maria 
UNESCO Clasification: 2401 Biología animal (zoología)
240101 Anatomía animal
310901 Anatomía
Keywords: Sialography
Anatomy
Dog
High-field magnetic resonance imaging
Salivary glands
Issue Date: 2018
Publisher: 0340-2096
Journal: Journal of Veterinary Medicine Series C: Anatomia Histologia Embryologia 
Abstract: The aim of the study was to describe the anatomical location and the topographic relationship of the major salivary glands to associated tissues in six dog cadavers by high-field magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and gross anatomical dissections and sections. Spin-echo T1-weighted and T2-weighted magnetic resonance (MR) images were obtained in transverse, sagittal, and dorsal planes with a 1.5 T magnet. The digastric muscle, the external auditory canal, the eyeball, and the medial pterygoid muscle were the most consistent topographic landmarks for the identification of the mandibular, parotid, and zygomatic salivary glands, respectively. The best differentiation and contrast of the glands was observed in the T2-weighted images. In contrast with the osseous and muscular tissues, the salivary glands appeared hyperintense in greater or lesser measure except for the parotid gland, which displayed a hypointense signal. The rostral part of the monostomatic sublingual gland was precisely located between the tongue and the mylohyoid muscle. The best delineation between the caudal part of the monostomatic sublingual gland and the cranial aspect of the mandibular gland was observed in dorsal MRI at the level of the palate and the branches of the superior dental arcade. Good evaluation of the mandibular, parotid, caudal part of the monostomatic sublingual, zygomatic and buccal ventral glands was possible in sagittal MRI in close relation with the external auditory canal and the temporomandibular joint. The ventral buccal glands were also observed near the buccal vestibule as was the palatine glands within the soft palate.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/47074
ISSN: 0340-2096
DOI: 10.1111/ahe.12396
Source: Journal of Veterinary Medicine Series C: Anatomia Histologia Embryologia [ISSN 0340-2096], v. 47, p. 551-559
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