Background: The inferior alveolar nerve (IAN) courses through the mandibular foramen (MF) to enter the first segment of the mandibular canal (MC) in the mandibular ramus, to further supply with trigeminal fibers the lower teeth of that hemimandible. As the IAN also supplies the mylohyoid nerve, it is a mixed nerve.
Methods: Unusual morphologies of the mandibular ramus were encountered during a retrospective study of archived CBCT files.
The infraorbital nerve (ION) and artery (IOA) course in the infraorbital canal (IOC) to exit through the infraorbital foramen (IOF). Few previous studies brought evidence of accessory IOF. Evaluation of the IOF in Cone Beam Computed Tomography (CBCT) is more accurate to determine whether or not foramina of maxilla are supplied by canaliculi deriving from the IOC.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe transantral or ectopic infraorbital canal (IOC) courses diagonally through the maxillary sinus (MS), thereby being exposed to risk during a number of surgical procedures. A few prior reports have presented evidence of a septa-embedded IOC, albeit only on single-plane slices. We identified this extremely rare variation of the IOC during a retrospective study of the cone-beam computed tomography files of 2 patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: The infraorbital canal (IOC) courses through the roof of the maxillary sinus (MS). Different grading systems concerning the topography of the IOC have been proposed. Further, it has been suggested that a transantral IOC would be morphologically related to Haller's cells (HCs).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRom J Morphol Embryol
July 2020
Developmental theories regarding the premaxillary (incisive) suture commonly overlook it separates the premaxillary and maxillary parts of the frontal process of maxilla. Thus, one would expect that neurovascular structures within this transitory mesenchymal zone to appear embedded within the adult frontal process of maxilla. The sutura notha (false suture, Weber's sutura longitudinalis imperfecta) is a poorly described, although constantly present, shallow groove in front of the anterior lacrimal crest, being perforated by a row of holes first described, to our knowledge, by Macalister, in 1884.
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