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ORAL HISTOLOGY AND EMBRYOLOGY
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ORAL HISTOLOGY Oral Histology is the study of microscopic structure, composition, and functions of oral tissues. Oral histology describes in detail the tissues of The teeth Periodontium Surrounding oral mucosa.
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ORAL EMBRYOLOGY Oral embryology will deal with development of different orofacial tissue Teeth Face Soft tissues Hard tissue Developmental anomalies
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Oral Cavity Oval shaped space bordered by lips, cheeks palate, and floor of the mouth. Oral Cavity Proper Space within the teeth to the oropharynx & floor of mouth.
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Vestibule Space between cheeks & lips & teeth & gingiva Oral Vestibule is divided into Posterior sections Anterior sections Anterior Vestibule Exists with lips closed (blow some air) this is best shown diagrammatically.
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Types of oral mucosa 1. Masticatory Mucosa Covers the hard palate,the free and attached gingiva These areas are most used during mastication It is firmly attached to underlying tissues It is keratinized stratified squamous epithelial
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2. Lining Mucosa Covers the lips, cheeks, the floor of the mouth, the underside of the tongue, the alveolar mucosa: (covers alveolar process, loosely attached to bone) The color of the buccal mucosa is pinkish, bluish/grey and may contain brown to black pigmentation = it is normal Mucous membrane of the vestibule is thin: there are many blood vessels visible = red
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Normal color of buccal mucosa varies depending on: vascularity hemoglobin content, density of CT width of epithelium degree of keratinization. These tissues are not firmly attached to underlying structures It is composed of stratified squamous epithelium NOT keratinized
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3. Specialized Mucosa Covers the dorsum (top) surface of the tongue Contains taste buds
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The tongue Tongue A mobile, muscular organ attached with its base and central part of its body to the floor of the oral cavity Function: aids in speech, mastication, taste, deglutition (swallowing) Surfaces DORSAL – top superior surface, fairly uniform in appearance, soft to palpation & grayish pink in color VENTRAL – underside, inferior LATERAL – 2 sides of tongue
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Tongue papilla Papillae The tongue mucosa of the dorsum forms numerous small elevations called papillae Gives the tongue a very characteristic roughened surface. Use gauze for examining the tongue There are four types of papillae and on the tongue Filiform Fungiform Circumvallate Foliate (minute)
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1. Filiform Papillae Hair-like projections Most numerous on anterior 2/3rd of tongue, but spread over entire tongue Slender elongated, conical structures Whitish, pink in color
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2. Fungiform Papillae Shaped like flat broad mushrooms with rounded pink surface Redder (pinker) than filiform Scattered among filiform papillae and along sides At apex: less numerous than filiform House taste buds (sweet, salt, sour)
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Fungiform
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fungiform
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3. Circumvallate papillae Form a v shaped (line) grove just anterior and parallel to the terminal sulcus Divides the anterior 2/3 and posterior 1/3 Contains tastes buds and salivary glands
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Circumvallates papillae
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4. Foliate Papillae Irregular elevated folds of mucosa on the posterior lateral border Contains Von Ebner Glands (salivary glands)
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Floor of the mouth Also known as the Sublingual sulcus A horseshoe shaped space (when the tongue is elevated) Non Keratinized stratified squamous, soft, smooth Pink in color (Vascular network, may vary in prominence) Inferior boundary of the oral cavity proper Contains: sublingual gland, Bartholine duct (anterior to sub mandibular gland) Submandibular (Submaxillary) gland, Wharton’s duct
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Floor of Floor of mouth
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Dental hard tissues Teeth Enamel Dentine Cementum bone
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