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Infraorbital groove

Infraorbital groove
Gray157.png
Left maxilla. Outer surface. (Infra-orbital groove labeled at upper right.)
Orbita mensch.jpg
Details
Latin Sulcus infraorbitalis maxillae
Dorlands
/Elsevier
s_28/12768771
Anatomical terms of bone
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Not to be confused with the inferior orbital fissure, which is just lateral to the infraorbital groove.

Also not to be confused with the infraorbital canal, into which the groove enters, nor the infraorbital foramen, which is the canal's opening on the other side.

Near the middle of the posterior part of the orbital surface of the maxilla is the infraorbital groove (or sulcus), for the passage of the infraorbital vessels and nerve.

The groove begins at the middle of the posterior border (with which it is continuous) near the upper edge of the infratemporal surface and, passing forward, ends in a canal which subdivides into two branches.

Horizontal section of nasal and orbital cavities. (Note distinction between infraorbital groove and inferior orbital fissure.)

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



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