1/ “Say Aaaaaaah!” I was explaining to my resident how I remember tongue anatomy on imaging & he said, “You should post that to twitter!”
So here it is, a
https://abs.twimg.com/emoji/v2/... draggable="false" alt="🧵" title="collectie" aria-label="Emoji: collectie">about how to remember
https://abs.twimg.com/emoji/v2/... draggable="false" alt="👅" title="Tong" aria-label="Emoji: Tong"> anatomy on imaging. #medstudenttwitter #medtwitter #radres #medstudent #FOAMed #FOAMrad #neurorad
So here it is, a
2/ When you look on the coronal plane at the tongue, the first thing you notice are two column-like structures that look like a pair of jeans—genioglossus—or as I like to say “jean-ee-o-glossus.” Genioglossus is latin for jeans of the tongue, right?
https://abs.twimg.com/emoji/v2/... draggable="false" alt="😉" title="Knipogend gezicht" aria-label="Emoji: Knipogend gezicht">
3/Right below the jeans are what look like a pair of clown shoes—the geniohyoid. So you see a pair of legs going right into a pair of shoes.
4/The clown shoes look like they are balancing on a tight rope—the tight rope is the mylohyoid. The mylohyoid is easy to remember as the tight rope b/c it is often called the mylohyoid sling—a sling is like a tight rope
5/ So every time I look at the tongue on imaging, I am looking to make sure I can see my clown walking on a tight rope. Any distortion of that is pathologic.
6/ And although it’s not quite the tongue, right beneath the tight rope are two tubular looking structures pointed at you—the anterior bellies of the digastric muscles. I think they look like two gun barrels pointed at you.