• Premaxilla/PMS may remain mechanically distinct during childhood growth. • Incisive canal terminates beneath a mechanosensory incisive papilla field. • Papillary input provides patterned nasopalatine (V2) afference to brainstem. • Hypothesized LC/NTS coupling links V2 afference to arousal/autonomic control. • Altered gateway signaling may bias sleep, state stability and emotion regulation. • Predictions are testable with morphometry, QST, pupillometry and HRV. The premaxilla is developmentally distinct and may remain mechanically differentiated from the maxilla via the premaxillary-maxillary suture during growth. At the same anatomical locus, the incisive canals transmit the nasopalatine neurovascular bundle and terminate beneath the incisive papilla and anterior palatal rugae, a mucosal field characterized by organized somatosensory innervation and mechanotransductive specializations. Despite the ubiquity of this region in dentistry and orthodontics, it is still largely treated as a passive landmark rather than a functional sensory interface. A “nasopalatine sensory gateway” hypothesis is proposed: premaxillary morphology (including PMS biomechanics), incisive canal architecture, and the incisive papilla/anterior rugae mechanosensory field together shape tonic and phasic maxillary trigeminal (V2) afference during growth. This patterned input is hypothesized to contribute to calibration of brainstem sensorimotor and autonomic setpoints relevant to tongue posture, lip seal, nasal breathing preference, and baseline state stability. In susceptible subgroups, persistent differences in this afferent stream may bias state regulation (sleep continuity, autonomic flexibility, arousal reactivity) and influence trajectories of emotion regulation and neurobehavior. The hypothesis can be tested by combining imaging phenotypes, quantitative sensory testing of the papilla/rugae field, and state markers (pupillometry, HRV, sleep metrics) with longitudinal developmental outcomes.
Björn U. Winter (Sun,) studied this question.
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