Histological Features Of Taste Buds And Oral Mucosa
Question 1. Tastebuds.
Answer:
- They are small void or barrel-shaped interepithelial organs.
Size: 80 cm high, 40 cm thick.
Structure:
- Their outer surface is covered by a few flat epithelial cells surrounding taste pores.
- It is composed of 30 – 80 spindle-shaped cells.
- The outer supporting cells are arranged like the staves of a barrel.
- They are slender, dark-staining cells that carry finger-like processes at their superficial end.
- A rich nerve plexus is found below the taste buds.
Site:
- The inner wall of the trough surrounding the vallate papillae, In folds of the foliate papillae On the posterior surface of the epiglottis.
- At the tip of fungiform papillae.
- Lateral borders of the tongue.
Question 2. Vermillion border.
Answer:
- The transitional zone between the skin of the lip and the mucous membrane of the lip is called a vermillion zone.
- The line that separates the skin from the vermillion zone is called the vermillion border.
- It is characterized by a thicker mildly keratinized epithelium and numerous long papillae of the lamina propria.
- Large capillary loops are present close to the surface.
- It is exposed to the atmosphere but there are no glands to keep it moist thus lips require frequent moistening.
Question 3. Mucogingival groove.
Answer:
- It is the junction between the attached gingiva and alveolar mucosa.
- Clinically identified by the color change from the bright pink of the alveolar mucosa to the pale pink of the gingiva.
Histology:
- The epithelium of the attached gingival is keratinized or para-keratinized.
- Lamina propria of it contains numerous collagen bundles.
- The structure of mucosa changes at the mucogingival groove where alveolar mucosa has thicker, nonkeratinized epithelium and lamina propria with numerous elastic fibers.
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