# Using the Masseteric Artery to Navigate the Masseteric Nerve in Facial Reanimation Surgery

**Authors:** Stefan Rössler, Wolfgang Zemann, Niels Hammer, Veronica Antipova

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/medicina62010082 · 2025-12-30

## TL;DR

This study explores the relationship between the masseteric artery and nerve in facial surgery, offering guidance for their identification and navigation.

## Contribution

The paper provides new morphological insights into the intramuscular course of the masseteric artery relative to the masseteric nerve.

## Key findings

- The masseteric artery consistently enters the masseter muscle inferior to the masseteric nerve.
- The artery crosses the nerve in the upper or middle third of the muscle in over half of the cases.
- The artery is unsuitable for distal intramuscular orientation due to its limited reach to the lower third of the muscle.

## Abstract

Background and Objectives: The masseteric artery (Ma) enters the masseter muscle (Mm) together with the masseteric nerve (Mn) via the mandibular notch. Morphological detail on the intramuscular course of the Ma and its relationship to the Mn remains scarce to date. When utilizing the Mn in facial reanimation surgery, a constant relationship between the Ma and Mn could be used for intramuscular orientation when preparing the Mn and for an indirect localization via ultrasound. This study examines the intramuscular course of the Ma and its relationship to the Mn. Materials and Methods: Sixty hemicrania obtained from thirty postmortem individuals aged between 54 and 99 years and embalmed using the Thiel methods were examined. Results: Four types of Ma were identified according to their endpoint in the Mm. In 5% of cases, no Ma could be identified (Type 0), 48.3% (Type 1) terminated within the upper third, 41.7% (Type 2) in the middle third, and 5% (Type 3) in the lower third. The Ma consistently entered the Mm inferior and in 85% of cases additionally slightly posterior to the Mn. The main trunk of the Ma crossed the Mn in the upper third of the Mm in 31.7% of cases, in the middle third in 23.3%, and in the lower third in 1.7% of cases. Of these, 13.3% had the Ma crossing the Mn. Smaller branches crossed the Mn in 45% of cases. Conclusions: If an Ma is present, it may be used for intramuscular orientation and indirect location of the Mn via the mandibular notch. Since the Ma reaches the lower third of the muscle in only a few cases, it is unsuitable for intramuscular orientation to locate the Mn via a distal approach.

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12843436/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12843436