L10.3 Oral Cavity Flashcards
1
Q
Boundaries of the oral cavity
A
- Roof: Maxilla
- Floor: Mandible
- Mandible articulates with the temporal bone (sliding hinge joint → chewing)
- Msucles help with mastication, and also form wall of cavity
- LAT: Buccinator
2
Q
Mastication muscles
A
- (innervated by trigeminal N)
- Temporalis
- Massester
3
Q
Facal expression muscles
A
- (By facial N)
- Orbicularis oris (around lips)
- Buccinator (closes space b/w mandible and maxilla)
4
Q
Roof of the mouth
A
- Hard palate
- Palatine process
- Horizontal process of palatine bone (Posteriorly)
- Soft palate (behind the hard palate)
- Covered by muscles and connective tissues
- Palatine glands
5
Q
Features of the palatine glands
A
- Deep to mucosa
- Mucosa continues throughout the whole of oral cavity (lines tongue as well)
- Deeper = hard/soft palate
- BV runs under mucosa
- Lesser palatine N & A → POS to Soft palate
- Greater palatine N & A → along hard palate
- N project up in the incisor foramen (ANT) into INF quadrant of the nasal cavity
6
Q
Floor of the mouth
A
- POS part → Rami of mandible → projecting up to temporal mandibular joint
- Mandible deficient INF → covered by mylohyoid muscle
- Attaches to mandible and hyoid bone
- N coming from base of skull → through foramen ovale → branch into different branches to oral cavity
- Hyoid bone
- Sits inbetween floor of mouth and neck
7
Q
Oral vestibule
A
- Space b/w dental arches where mucosa is reflected down
- Allows food in and storing while chewing
8
Q
Sulcus terminalis
A
- splits tongue into ANT 2/3 and POS 1/3
9
Q
Foramen caecum
A
- Depression at the apex;
- remnant of the thyroglossal duct (closes at birth)
10
Q
Arches projecting from the tongue and the location of the palatine tonsils
A
- Palatopharyngeal arch
- Palatoglossal arch
- Palatine tonsils found in b/w the arches
- Chronic inflammation → closes cavity for food and makes it difficult to breath
11
Q
4 different papillae found on the tongue
A
- (swellings on dorsal surface of tongue)
- Valate → ANT to sulcus terminalis, lining up in a row
- Foliate → grooves at LAT-POS part
- Fungiform → scattered around ANT 2/3 of tongue
- Fungiform papillae is very vascular
- Filiform → to make tongue rougher → for food
12
Q
Where are tastebuds found
A
- Tastebuds are embedded in the walls of the papillae
- Connected to sensory N that run in chorda tympani→ branch of CN7
- NOT found in filiform papillae (which are sharp and pointy)
13
Q
Extrinsic muscles of the tongue
A
External attachments of the tongue (paired on each side) → altering position
- Palatoglossus
- Palate above → tongue
- Elevate tongue
- NOT innervated by CN12, but by vagus instead
- Styolglossus (POS)
- Styloid process → tongue (more horizontal)
- Retracts tongue
- Hyoglossus
- Hyoid bone → underneath of tongue
- Depress tongue
- Genioglossus
- Genial tubercle (POS mandible in midline) → back end of tongue
- Protraction of tongue
14
Q
Innervation of the extrinsic muscles of the tongue
A
- CN12 EXCEPT for palatoglossus (By branch of vagus)
- N damage → tongue deviates to the side of the lesion when protracted tongue
- Due to unopposed action of genioglossus on the other side
15
Q
Intrinsic muscles of the tongue
A
- Have attachments within the tongue → altering the shape of the tongue
- SUP longitudinal
- INF longitudinal
- Transverse & vertical