These are two triangular wings projecting laterally from anterosuperior part of the body. Each consists of: • A base forming medial end of the wing. • Tip forming the lateral end of the wing. • Superior surface forming floor of
anterior cranial fossa. • Inferior surface forming upper boundary of
superior orbital fissure. • Posterior surface projects into the
Sylvian point. • Medially, terminates in the anterior clinoid process.
Development Until the seventh or eighth month of
fetal development, the body of the sphenoid consists of two parts: one in front of the
tuberculum sellae, the presphenoid, with which the small wings are continuous; the other, consisting of the
sella turcica and
dorsum sellae, the postsphenoid, with which are associated the great wings, and pterygoid processes. The greater part of the bone is ossified in cartilage. There are fourteen centers in all, six for the presphenoid and eight for the postsphenoid.
Presphenoid By about the ninth week of
fetal development an ossific center appears for each of the
small wings (orbito-sphenoids) just lateral to the
optic foramen; this is followed by the appearance of two nuclei in the
presphenoid part of the body. The sphenoidal conchae are each developed from a center that makes its appearance about the fifth month; at birth they consist of small triangular laminae, and it is not until the third year that they become hollowed out and coneshaped; about the fourth year they fuse with the labyrinths of the
ethmoid bone, and between the ninth and twelfth years they unite with the sphenoid bone.
Postsphenoid The first ossific nuclei are those for the great wings (
alisphenoids). One makes its appearance in each wing between the
foramen rotundum and
foramen ovale about the eighth week. The orbital plate and that part of the sphenoid, which is found in the temporal fossa, as well as the lateral pterygoid plate, are ossified in membrane (Fawcett). Soon after, the centers for the
postsphenoid part of the body appear, one on either side of the sella turcica, and become blended together about the middle of fetal life. Each
medial pterygoid plate (except its hamulus) is ossified in membrane, and its center probably appears about the ninth or tenth week; the hamulus becomes chondrified during the third month, and almost at once ossifies (Fawcett). The medial joins the lateral pterygoid plate about the sixth month. About the fourth month, a center appears for each lingula and speedily joins the rest of the bone. The
presphenoid is united to the postsphenoid about the eighth month, and at birth the sphenoid is in three pieces [Fig. 4]: a central, consisting of the body and small wings, and two lateral, each comprising a great wing and pterygoid process. In the first year after birth the great wings and body unite, and the small wings extend inward above the anterior part of the body, and, meeting with each other in the middle line, form an elevated smooth surface, termed the jugum sphenoidale. By the twenty-fifth year the sphenoid and occipital are completely fused. Between the pre- and postsphenoid there are occasionally seen the remains of a canal, the canalis cranio-pharyngeus, through which, in early fetal life, the hypophyseal diverticulum of the buccal
ectoderm is transmitted. The sphenoidal sinuses are present as minute cavities at the time of birth (Onodi), but do not attain their full size until after puberty. ==Function==