Frontonasal process

The frontonasal process, or frontonasal prominence is one of the five swellings that develop to form the face. The frontonasal process is unpaired, and the others are the paired maxillary prominences, and the paired mandibular prominences. During the fourth week of embryonic development, an area of thickened ectoderm develops, on each side of the frontonasal process called the nasal placodes or olfactory placodes, and appear immediately under the forebrain.

By invagination these areas are converted into two nasal pits, which indent the frontonasal prominence and divide it into medial and lateral nasal processes.

Nasal processes

Medial and lateral nasal processes shown on embryo.

The medial nasal process (nasomedial) on the inner side of each nasal pit merge into the intermaxillary segment and form the upper lip, crest, and tip of the nose. The medial nasal processes merge with the maxillary prominences. The lateral nasal process from each side merge to form the alae of the nose.

Clinical significance

Failure to fuse can cause a cleft lip.

Genetics

There is some evidence that development involves Sonic hedgehog and Fibroblast growth factor 8.

References

Public domainThis article incorporates text in the public domain from page 67 of the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)


Uses material from the Wikipedia article Frontonasal process, released under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.