(Redirected from Platysma)
The platysma is a
superficial muscle that overlaps the
sternocleidomastoid.
It is a broad sheet arising from the
fascia covering the upper parts of the
Pectoralis major and
Deltoideus; its fibers cross the
clavicle, and proceed obliquely upward and medialward along the side of the neck.
The anterior fibers interlace, below and behind the
symphysis menti, with the fibers of the muscle of the opposite side; the posterior fibers cross the
mandible, some being inserted into the bone below the oblique line, others into the skin and
subcutaneous tissue of the lower part of the face, many of these fibers blending with the muscles about the angle and lower part of the mouth.
Sometimes fibers can be traced to the
Zygomaticus, or to the margin of the
Orbicularis oculi. Beneath the Platysma, the external
jugular vein descends from the angle of the mandible to the clavicle.
Variations
Variations occur in the extension over the face and over the clavicle and shoulder; it may be absent or interdigitate with the muscle of the opposite side in front of the neck; attachment to clavicle, mastoid process or occipital bone occurs. A more or less independent
fasciculus, the
Occipitalis minor, may extend from the fascia over the
Trapezius to fascia over the insertion of the
Sternocleidomastoideus.
Nerve
The Platysma is supplied by the cervical branch of the facial nerve.
Actions
When the entire Platysma is in action it produces a slight wrinkling of the surface of the skin of the neck in an oblique direction. Its anterior portion, the thickest part of the muscle, depresses the lower jaw; it also serves to draw down the lower lip and angle of the mouth in the expression of melancholy.
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Additional images
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