Carotid space
Updates to Article Attributes
The carotid space, the suprahyoid portion of which isalso known as the poststyloid parapharyngeal space, is a deep compartment of the head and neck bound by the carotid sheath.
Terminology
The "carotid space" terminology was introduced by some radiologists to facilitate differential diagnosis and is used in this article 1. However, in much of the surgical and anatomical literature, the carotid space within the suprahyoid neck is considered part of the parapharyngeal space 2,3. Under this nomenclature, the parapharyngeal space is divided into prestyloid and poststyloid (retrostyloid) compartments. The poststyloid parapharyngeal space consists of or includes the carotid space or sheath around the cervical internal carotid artery.
Gross anatomy
The carotid space is a roughly cylindrical space that extends from the skull base through to the aortic arch. It is circumscribed by the carotid sheath, which has contributions from all three layers of the deep cervical fascia 4.
The carotid artery bifurcation occurs near the level of the hyoid bone 1.
Contents
- common carotid artery inferiorly and internal carotid artery superiorly
- internal jugular vein
- nerves
- glossopharyngeal nerve (CN IX): anterior to vessels
- vagus nerve (CN X): posterior to vessels in posterior notch; extends below hyoid to mediastinum within the carotid sheath
- accessory nerve (CN XI)
- hypoglossal nerve (CN XII)
- sympathetic nerves: medial to vessels lateral to retropharyngeal space
- deep cervical lymph node chain (levels II, III, and IV)
Relations
Suprahyoid carotid space:
- anteriorly: masticator space; parapharyngeal space
- laterally: parotid space
- posteriorly: perivertebral space
The suprahyoid portion of the carotid space is synonymous with the poststyloid compartment of the parapharyngeal space.
Boundaries
- superior margin: lower border of jugular foramen
- inferior margin: aortic arch
- anterolateral margin: sternocleidomastoid muscle
Radiographic appearance
Ultrasound
Ultrasound is good for identifying vascular structures in the lateral neck. The origin of the internal and external carotid arteries is the main point of sonographic interest as the carotid space superior to this cannot be visualised due to the mastoid process.
The internal carotid is usually posterolateral to the external carotid however in 5-10% of the population the internal carotid lies medial or anterior or the two vessels may lie within the same frontal plane 5.
The external carotid can be identified from the internal carotid as:
- it branches within the neck; the first immediate branch is the superior thyroid artery
- Doppler tracing of vessel flow within the internal carotid is typical of low peripheral resistance (high diastolic peak), whereas the external carotid has high-resistance flow (lower diastolic peak, systolic peak higher than that of the internal carotid) 5
CT
- often modality of choice when evaluating for pathology within the carotid space because CT is able to identify any benign or malignant tumours within the carotid space and allows for better visualisation of any associated bone involvement in comparison to MRI
- best identifies vascular lesions on CT angiography 6
MRI
- useful for identifying between the different types of benign tumours involving the carotid space
- provides better soft tissue contrast in comparison to CT and can be useful at elucidating any signs of intramural metastatic nodal invasion of the carotid artery which is a relative contraindication for surgical tumour resection 6
Related pathology
A mass originating from the carotid space will cause anterior displacement of the parapharyngeal space fat. Lesions include 7:
- tumors
- neurogenic tumors (most common): paraganglioma, schwannoma, neurofibroma
- lymph nodes: metastatic lymphadenopathy, lymphoma
- meningioma
- vascular lesions
- cellulitis/abscess
-<li>deep cervical lymph node chain</li>- +<li>
- +<a title="Cervical lymph node levels" href="/articles/lymph-node-levels-of-the-neck">deep cervical lymph node chain</a> (levels II, III, and IV)</li>