Depressor labii inferioris muscle

 The depressor labii inferioris (or quadratus labii inferioris) is a facial muscle that helps lower the bottom lip.

Depressor labii
Depressor labii inferioris.png
Muscles of the head, face, and neck.
Details
Originoblique line of the mandible, between the symphysis and the mental foramen
Insertionintegument of the lower lipOrbicularis oris fibers, its fellow of the opposite side
Nervefacial nerve - Mandibular branch
ActionsDepression of the lower lip
Identifiers
Latinmusculus depressor labii inferioris
TA98A04.1.03.033
TA22083
FMA46816
Anatomical terms of muscle
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StructureEdit

This muscle arises from the oblique line of the mandible, and inserts on the skin of the lower lip, blending in with the orbicularis oris muscle. At its origin, depressor labii is continuous with the fibers of the platysma muscle. Much yellow fat is intermingled with the fibers of this muscle.

InnervationEdit

The depressor labii inferioris is innervated by the mandibular division of the facial nerve.

ActionsEdit

This muscle helps to depress the lower lip.

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article
 Metasyntactic variable, which is released under the 
Creative Commons
Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License
.