Need an easier read? Change your font
Anatomy Insight | Β Comic Sans | Lexend
Need an easier read? Change your font
Anatomy Insight | Β Comic Sans | Lexend
Listen to this guideΒ π§
Audio version available to support all learning styles. Press play to listen!
English (US)
English (UK)
The muscles that control facial expression lie just under the skin in the face. They usually start on a bone or a piece of connective tissue (fascia) and attach to the skin. When they contract, they pull on the skin, creating facial movements.
All these muscles develop from the second pharyngeal arch during embryonic growth and are controlled by the facial nerve (cranial nerve VII).
They can be grouped into three main categories:
Orbital group β around the eyes
Nasal group β around the nose
Oral group β around the mouth.
The orbital group includes the muscles around the eyes. These muscles mainly control eyelid movement and help protect the eyes from injury or dryness. These muscles protect the eyes and produce facial expressions involving the eyes, like squinting or frowning. The orbital group is supplied by branches of the facial nerve.
The orbicularis oculi is a circular muscle that surrounds the eye and extends into the eyelid. It has three parts: the palpebral part, which gently closes the eyelids (like blinking); the lacrimal part, which helps with tear drainage; and the orbital part, which tightly closes the eyes (like squinting).
Origin: Medial orbital margin, medial palpebral ligament, lacrimal bone.
Insertion: Skin around the orbit and eyelids.
Innervation: Temporal and zygomatic branches of the facial nerve.
The corrugator supercilii is a small muscle located deeper and above the inner end of the eyebrow. It draws the eyebrows downward and inward, creating vertical wrinkles between them (frowning).
Origin: Medial part of the superciliary arch.
Insertion: Skin above the middle of the eyebrow.
Innervation: Temporal branches of the facial nerve.
The nasal group of facial muscles controls the movements of the nose and the skin around it. These muscles help shape facial expressions that involve the nose, such as flaring the nostrils, wrinkling the bridge of the nose, or lowering the eyebrows in frowning.
Like all facial expression muscles, the nasal group muscles come from the second pharyngeal arch during embryonic development and are supplied by branches of the facial nerve (cranial nerve VII).
The nasalis is the largest nasal muscle and has two parts: the transverse part, which compresses the nostrils, and the alar part, which widens the nostrils.
Origin: Maxilla (upper jaw bone) near the nose.
Insertion: Cartilage and skin of the nose.
Innervation: Buccal branches of the facial nerve.
The procerus is a small muscle between the eyebrows. It pulls the eyebrows downward and makes horizontal wrinkles over the bridge of the nose (frowning).
Origin: Nasal bone.
Insertion: Skin of the lower forehead.
Innervation: Buccal branches of the facial nerve.
Quick Reference Table: Muscle Name, Origin, Insertion & Innervation
Ready for download! Your muscle cheat sheet is here. Save it for later, study on the go, and review the essentials anytime.
The oral group controls the movements of the mouth and lips. These muscles are essential for speech, eating, and facial expressions such as smiling, frowning, or kissing. These muscles control lip and mouth movement, important for speaking, chewing, and expressing emotion.Β
The orbicularis oris is a circular muscle that surrounds the mouth and forms most of the lips. It closes and puckers the lips (as in kissing or whistling).
Origin: Maxilla and mandible, as well as surrounding cheek muscles.
Insertion: Skin and lining of the lips.
Innervation: Buccal branches of the facial nerve.
The buccinator is a thin, flat muscle that forms the wall of the cheek. It pulls the cheeks inward against the teeth, preventing food from collecting in the cheeks while chewing. Itβs also used when blowing air or playing wind instruments.
Origin: Maxilla and mandible, pterygomandibular raphe.
Insertion: Blends with the orbicularis oris muscle.
Innervation: Buccal branches of the facial nerve.
These smaller muscles move the lips and corners of the mouth:
Upper group: risorius, zygomaticus major and minor, levator labii superioris, levator labii superioris alaeque nasi, levator anguli oris.
Lower group: depressor anguli oris, depressor labii inferioris, mentalis.
Ready to test what you've learned?
Play through the games below to test your understanding and sharpen your skills.
Gray, H. (2009). Anatomy of the human body, part 2 (LibriVox Volunteers, Narr.) [Audiobook]. LibriVox. https://librivox.org/anatomy-of-the-human-body-part-2-by-henry-gray/ (Original work published 1858)
J Gordon Betts, Desaix, P., Johnson, E., Johnson, J. E., Korol, O., Kruse, D., Poe, B., Wise, J., Womble, M. D., & Young, K. A. (2013). Anatomy & physiology. Openstax College, Rice University. https://openstax.org/details/books/anatomy-and-physiology
Based on OpenStax, Anatomy and Physiology (2013), licensed under CC BY 4.0.
Access for free at https://openstax.org/books/anatomy-and-physiology/pages/1-introduction.
Content paraphrased; adaptations were made.