Inferior alveolar artery

Inferior alveolar artery

Plan of branches of internal maxillary artery. (Inferior alveolar labeled at bottom center.)

Plan of branches of the maxillary artery.
Details
Source maxillary artery
Branches incisor branch
mental branch
lingual branch
mylohyoid branch
Supplies dental alveolus
Identifiers
Latin arteria alveolaris inferior
Dorlands
/Elsevier
a_61/12153421
TA A12.2.05.056
FMA 49695

Anatomical terminology

The inferior alveolar artery (inferior dental artery) is an artery of the face.

Course

It descends with the inferior alveolar nerve to the mandibular foramen on the medial surface of the ramus of the mandible.

It runs along the mandibular canal in the substance of the bone, accompanied by the nerve, and opposite the first premolar tooth divides into two branches, incisor and mental.

Incisor branch

The incisor branch is continued forward beneath the incisor teeth as far as the middle line, where it anastomoses with the artery of the opposite side

The inferior alveolar artery and its incisor branch during their course through the substance of the bone give off a few twigs which are lost in the cancellous tissue, and a series of branches which correspond in number to the roots of the teeth: these enter the minute apertures at the extremities of the roots, and supply the pulp of the teeth.

Mental branch

The mental branch escapes with the nerve at the mental foramen, supplies the chin, and anastomoses with the submental and inferior labial arteries.

Mylohyoid branch

As the inferior alveolar artery enters the foramen, it gives off a mylohyoid branch which runs in the mylohyoid groove, and supplies the mylohyoid muscle.

Additional images

References

    This article incorporates text in the public domain from the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)

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