Alveolar nerve explained

The alveolar nerves or dental nerves include three superior alveolar nerves: the anterior superior alveolar nerve, middle superior alveolar nerve, and posterior superior alveolar nerve,and an inferior alveolar nerve.[1]

The superior alveolar nerves are all branches of the maxillary nerve, which is the second branch of the trigeminal nerve.

The inferior alveolar nerve, which is small in length, is a branch of the mandibular nerve, which is the third branch of the trigeminal nerve.[2]

References

  1. Web site: StackPath. 2021-04-08. www.rdhmag.com.
  2. Bernal. Laura. Sotelo-Hitschfeld. Pamela. König. Christine. Sinica. Viktor. Wyatt. Amanda. Winter. Zoltan. Hein. Alexander. Touska. Filip. Reinhardt. Susanne. Tragl. Aaron. Kusuda. Ricardo. 2021-03-01. Odontoblast TRPC5 channels signal cold pain in teeth. Science Advances. en. 7. 13. eabf5567. 10.1126/sciadv.abf5567. 2375-2548. 33771873. 7997515. 2021SciA....7.5567B. free.