The trigeminal cave (also known as Meckel's cave or cavum trigeminale) is a pouch of dura mater containing cerebrospinal fluid.

Trigeminal cave
The trigeminal ganglion and its branches represented here as 1st division, 2nd division, and 3rd division. The trigeminal cave houses this ganglion.
Details
Identifiers
Latincavum Meckeli, cavum trigeminale
TA98A14.1.01.108
TA25379
Anatomical terminology

Structure

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The trigeminal cave is formed by the two layers of dura mater (endosteal and meningeal) which are part of an evagination of the cerebellar tentorium near the apex of the petrous part of the temporal bone. It envelops the trigeminal ganglion. It is bounded by the dura overlying four structures:

  1. cerebellar tentorium superolaterally
  2. lateral wall of the cavernous sinus superomedially
  3. clivus medially
  4. posterior petrous face inferolaterally

Within the dural confines of the trigeminal cave, there is a continuation of subarachnoid space along the posterior aspect of the cave, representing a continuation of the cerebral basal cisterns.[1]

History

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Etymology

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It is named for Johann Friedrich Meckel, the Elder.[2][3]

References

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  This article incorporates text in the public domain from page 886 of the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)

  1. ^ Burr HS, Robinson GB: An anatomical study of the gasserian ganglion with particular reference to the nature and extend of Meckel’s Cave (M,C). Anatomical Record 29:269-282, 1925.
  2. ^ synd/2133 at Who Named It?
  3. ^ J. F. Meckel. Tractatus anatomico physiologicus de quinto pare nervorum cerebri. Göttingen 1748.