Nerves of the orbit. Seen from above.
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|Latin
|colspan="2"|n. supraorbitalis
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|colspan="2"|[subject #200 ]
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|Innervates
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|colspan="2"|ophthalmic division
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|MeSH
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|Dorlands/Elsevier
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The supraorbital nerve is a terminal branch of the frontal nerve. It emerges from the orbit by the supraorbital foramen and supplies the upper eyelid and forehead integuments.
Details from Gray's anatomy
The supraorbital nerve passes through the supraorbital foramen, and gives off, in this situation, palpebral filaments to the upper eyelid.
It then ascends upon the forehead, and ends in two branches, a medial and a lateral, which supply the integument of the scalp, reaching nearly as far back as the lambdoidal suture; they are at first situated beneath the Frontalis, the medial branch perforating the muscle, the lateral branch the galea aponeurotica. Both branches supply small twigs to the pericranium.