Incisive canals

The incisive canals (also: "nasopalatine canals") are two bony canals of the anterior hard palate connecting the nasal cavity and the oral cavity. An incisive canal courses through each maxilla. Below, the two incisive canals typically converge medially.[1]

Incisive canals
The bony palate and alveolar arch (incisive canals labeled at upper left)
Details
Identifiers
LatinCanales incisivi
TA98A02.1.00.061
TA2788
FMA59107
Anatomical terms of bone

Each incisive canal transmits a nasopalatine nerve, and an anastomosis of the greater palatine artery and a posterior septal branch of the sphenopalatine artery.[1]

Anatomy

An incisive canal has an average length of 10 mm, and an average width of up to 6 mm at the incisive fossa (the dimensions of the canal change with age, trauma, and loss of teeth).[1]

Course and openings

The two incisive canals usually (in 60% of individuals) have a characteristic "Y"-shaped or "V"-shaped morphology: above, each incisive canal opens into the nasal cavity on either side of the nasal septum as the nasal foramina; below, the two incisive canals converge medially to open into the oral cavity at midline at the incisive fossa[1] as several incisive foramina.[2]

Variation

There are several alternative morphologies of the canals: the two canals may not converge at any point, may have multiple openings superiorly, or only a single canal (with one inferior as well as only one superior opening) may be present.[1]

Contents

Through each canal ascends the terminal branch of the greater palatine artery (to anastomose with the posterior septal branch of sphenopalatine artery) while the nasopalatine nerve descends (to anastomose with the greater palatine nerve).[3]

Additional images

See also

References

  1. Lake S, Iwanaga J, Kikuta S, Oskouian RJ, Loukas M, Tubbs RS (July 2018). "The Incisive Canal: A Comprehensive Review". Cureus. 10 (7): e3069. doi:10.7759/cureus.3069. PMC 6166911. PMID 30280065.
  2. "incisive foramen". TheFreeDictionary.com. Retrieved 2022-05-25.
  3. Gray H (1918). Gray's Anatomy (20th ed.). p. 162.
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