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Home » Gingiva In Periodontology

Gingiva In Periodontology

February 6, 2026 by Kristensmith Taylor Leave a Comment

Gingiva In Periodontology

Gingiva
Answer:

  • It is defined as the tissue that covers the alveolus and encircles the necks of the teeth
  • It is immovable and firmly attached to the periosteum of the alveolar bone
  • Microscopic features
    1. Epithelium
      • Thick stratified squamous epithelium
      • Layers – stratum basale, stratum spinosum, stratum granulosum and stratum corneum
      • Sulcular epithelium, junctional epithelium and interdental col are non-keratinized areas in the gingiva.
      • Has stippled surface
    2. The junction between epithelium and lamina propria
      • Convoluted
      • The presence of plenty of deep rete pegs prevents epithelium from being stripped off
    3. Lamina propria
      • Contains long and narrow connective tissue papillae
      • It has a papillary layer and a reticular layer
      • It is made up of collagen bundles, long capillary loops, lymphatics and nerve tissue, and cells like fibroblasts, histiocytes, monocytes, mast cells, and lymphocytes
    4. Fibers
      • Denogingival
      • Alveologingival
      • Circular
      • Dentoperiosteal
      • Transseptal

Macroscopic features:

  1. Color – coral pink
  2. Consistency – firm and resilient
  3. Contour – scalloped
  4. Surface – stapling
  5. Parts
  • Free or marginal gingiva – embraces the necks of the teeth
    • It is separated from the attached gingiva by a free gingival groove.
  • Attached gingiva – part of the gingiva that is firmly bound to the periosteum
    • It is separated from the alveolar mucosa by the mucogingival line
  • Interdental papilla – part of the gingiva that fills the, space between two adjacent teeth

Gingival sulcus:

  • V-shaped space between the marginal gingiva and tooth surface
  • Depth is about 0-2 mm

Filed Under: Anatomy

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