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(Redirected from Transverse crest)
Canal within the temporal bone
The opening to the meatus is called the porus acusticus internus or internal acoustic opening. It is located inside the posterior cranial fossa of the skull, near the center of the posterior surface of the petrous part of the temporal bone. The size varies considerably. Its outer margins are smooth and rounded.
The canal which comprises the internal auditory meatus is short (about 1 cm) and runs laterally into the bone.
The lateral (outer) aspect of the canal is known as the fundus. The fundus is subdivided by two thin crests of bone to form three separate canals, through which course the facial and vestibulocochlear nerve branches. The falciform crest first divides the meatus into superior and inferior sections; a vertical crest (Bill's bar, named by William F. House) then divides the upper passage into anterior and posterior sections. Although there are three osseous canals, the fundus is conceptually divided more commonly into four quadrant areas according to the four major nerve branches of the inner ear:
anterior superior - facial nerve area (contains facial nerve and nervus intermedius)
anterior inferior - cochlear nerve area (contains cochlear nerve)
posterior superior - superior vestibular area (contains superior division of vestibular nerve)
posterior inferior - inferior vestibular area (contains inferior division of vestibular nerve)
The cochlear and vestibular branches of cranial nerve VIII separate according to this schema and terminate in the inner ear. The facial nerve continues traveling through the facial canal, eventually exiting the skull at the stylomastoid foramen. A common mnemonic to remember the anterior quadrants of the inner ear is: "seven up, coke down" (seventh nerve superior, cochlear nerve inferior).