Tongue
Tongue
Tongue
PRESENTED BY….
SIDHARTHA MANGAL BORDOLOI
INTRODUCTION
The tongue is the muscular organ situated in the
floor of the mouth.
FUNCTIONS
It is associated with the function of -:
i. Taste
ii. Speech
iii. Mastication
iv. Deglutition
ANATOMICAL FEATURS
The tongue has:
1. ROOT
Attached to the mandible and hyoid bone by fibres of
Genioglossus and Hyoglossus muscles.
Because of these attachments we are not able to swallow the
tongue itself.
2. TIP
Tip of tongue forms its anterior free end, which at rest, lies
behind the upper incisor teeth.
3. BODY
Has (a) curved upper surface or dorsum.
(b) an inferior or ventral surface.
ANATOMICAL FEATURS
DORSUM OF TONGUE
Convex in all directions.
Divided into
(a) oral or papillary,
(b) pharyngeal or lymphoid
part.
Its margins are free and in contact with the gums and
teeth. The palatoglossal fold merges with these
margins at the junction of anterior 2/3 with posterior
1/3.
2. Fungiform Papillae
Numerous near the tip and margins of the
tongue, but some of them are also scattered over
the dorsum.
4. Foliate papillae
These are present as 4 to 5 vertically arranged
mucous folds on the lateral margins of the
tongue, in front of the sulcus terminalis.
ANATOMICAL FEATURS
PHARYNGEAL or LYMPHOID PART
Lies behind the palatoglossal arches and sulcus terminalis.
Its posterior surface some times called the base of the tongue, forms the
anterior wall of oropharynx.
The mucous membrane has no papillae, but has many lymphoid follicles
that collectively constitute the lingual tonsils.
These are the median glossoepiglottic fold and right and left lateral
glossoepiglottic folds.
The lateral folds separate the vallecula from the piriform fossa.
ANATOMICAL FEATURS
INFERIOR or VENTRAL SURFACE
Lined by a thin mucous membrane which gets reflected on the floor
of the mouth. It does not contain papillae.
More laterally to the lingual veins, there is a fold called plica fimbriata
that is directed forwards and medially towards the tip of the tongue.
3. Transverse muscles
Extends from the median septum to the margins.
It makes the tongue narrow and elongated.
4. Vertical muscle
Present at the borders of the anterior part of the tongue.
It makes the tongue broad and flattened.
MUSCLES OF THE TONGUE
EXTRINSIC MUSCLE
Connects the
tongue to the
mandible via
genioglossus; to
the hyoid bone
via hyoglossus;
to the styloid
process via
styloglossus; and
to the palate via
palatoglossus.
MUSCLES OF THE TONGUE
1. Genioglossus
2. Hyoglossus
Thin quadrant muscle.
4. Palatoglossus
Originates from the oral
surface of palatine
aponeurosis.
The root of
the tongue
is also
supplied by
the tonsillar
and
ascending
pharyngeal
arteries.
VENOUS DRAINAGE OF THE TONGUE
The arrngement of the veins of the tongue is variable.
Posteriormost part
From the fourth arch, therefore, supplied by internal
laryngeal branch of the vagus nerve.
DEVELOPMENT OF TONGUE
2. Muscles
The muscles develop from the occipital
myotomes which are supplied by
hypoglossal nerve.
3. Connective tissue
Develops from local mesenchyme.
TASTE SENSATION
Four established tastes are:
receptor.
Taste buds have 3 types of cells;
a.Supporting cells,
b.Sensory cells and
c.Basal cells.
Taste bud has a pore that opens out to surface of
tongue.
Life span of taste buds is 10 to 14 days.
PATHWAY OF TASTE
Microvilli present on the taste cells act as receptor for taste.
The taste sensation is then transferred to the nerve fibres woven around
the body of the taste cells.
Taste impulses from the anterior 2/3rd of the tongue pass first into lingual
nerve then by the chorda tympani finally into the tractus solitarius in the
brain stem.
Sensation from the circumvallate papillae and from other posterior regions
of the mouth and throat transmitted through the IX cranial nerve and goes
into the tractus solitaries.
All taste fibers synapse in the posterior brain stem in the nuclei of the
tractus solitarious.
From the thalamus third order neurons are transmitted to the cerebral
cortex.
APPLIED ANATOMY
The under surface of the tongue is a good
site along with the bulbar conjunctiva for
observation of jaundice.
Microglossia
Presence of small or rudimentary tongue.
Macroglossia
Causes displacement of the teeth and malocclusion.
Unusual condition