DIGESTIVE SYSTEM 1.
Mucosa
Alimentary Canal: Epithelium: usually simple columnar with goblet cells;
may be stratified squamous if protection needed
Mouth
Pharynx Lamina propia: loose CT deep to epithelium
Esophagus
Muscularis mucosae: produces folds:
Stomach
Small intestine Plicae – small intestine ; rugae – stomach
Large intestine
Accessory digestive organs:
Teeth
Tongue
Salivary glands
Liver, and pancreas
Gallbladder
2. Submucosa
- made up of dense CT
-contains submucosal plexus, lymph and blood vessles
and submucosal [Meissner] plexus
4 layers of the gut:
1. Mucosa
2. Submucosa
3. Muscularis externa
4. Serosa
3. Muscularis externa
-smooth muscle, usually 2 layers:
Outer layer: longitudinal Inner layer: circular
-in between the muscle sublayers contains blood, lymph
vessels and the myenteric [Auerbach] nerve plexus
MOUTH
4. Serosa
-visceral layer of mesentery
-thin sheet of loose CT, rich in blood vessels, lymphatics
and adipose tissue
-covered with simple squamous epithelium
[Mesothelium]
NB: the esophagus is not suspended in a cavity but is
bound directly to adjacent structures and therefore
lacks a serosa, and have instead a thick adventitia, a
layer of tissue continuous with the surrounding
structures
ORAL CAVITY
Mouth and its structures:
a. tongue
b. teeth
c. major and minor salivary glands
d. tonsils
2 divisions:
1. Oral cavity proper – lies behind the teeth
2. vestibule – space between lips, cheeks and teeth
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TONSILS
-aggregations of lymphatic nodules clustered around
the posterior opening of the oral and nasal cavities
- organized into tonsillar [Waldeyer’s] ring of
immunologic protection located at the shared entrance
to the digestive and respiratory tract
Skin [face] side of lip
Free edge [red vermillion border]
Inner portion [oral mucosa]
-the oral cavity is formed, in part, by the lips and cheeks
- The lips are lined by a very thin skin covered by a
stratified squamous keratinized epithelium.
- Blood vessels are close to the lip surface, imparting a
red color to the lips.
Waldeyer’s ring includes:
-The outer surface of the lip contains hair follicles,
Palatine tonsils – either side of entrance to oropharynx sebaceous glands, and sweat glands.
between palatopharyngeal and palatoglossal arches
- The lips also contain skeletal muscle called orbicularis
Tubal tonsils – lateral walls of nasopharynx, posterior to oris.
opening of auditory tube
- Inside the free margin of the lip, the outer lining
Pharyngeal tonsil [ adenoid ] – located in the roof of changes to a thicker, stratified squamous nonkeratinized
nasopharynx oral epithelium.
Lingual tonsil - located at base of tongue on its superior
- Beneath the oral epithelium are found mucus -
surface
secreting labial glands.
LIP RED MARGIN
LIPS
-orbicularis oris muscle
-dense CT
- 3 areas:
LIP RED MARGIN
-Much thicker than that of the face
-Red color due to deep penetration of CT papillae into
the epithelium
- Extensive vascularity of underlying CT [ venous blood
vessels ]
- Sensory receptors – e.g Meissner’s corpuscle
MUCOCUTANEOUS JUNCTION - Transition from
keratinized red margin to thick parakeratinized
epithelium of oral mucosa
Masticatory MUCOSA Gingiva [gums] and hard palate
-Where the red freely mobile mucosa of the floor of the
mouth is reflected onto the alveolar processes, there is
abrupt transition to a pink layer firmly fixed to
underlying bone by dense connective tissue.
Gingiva
ORAL MUCOSA
-Varies from region to region
-Does not keratinize completely [ stratum granulosum
upper layer ] … or may be thick with parakeratinization
[ stratum superficiale ]
-Consists of:
masticatory mucosa
lining mucosa,
and specialized mucosa
GINGIVA
-It covers the gums & extends between the teeth
-In the roof of the mouth , it continous from the
alveolar process over the entire hard palate.
CHEEKS
- Thicker stratified squamous epithelium
- Striated muscle
- SUBMUCOSA Contains minor salivary glands
LINING MUCOSA
SPECIALIZED MUCOSA
Associated with sensation of taste & restricted to
dorsal surface of the tongue
Contains papillae & taste buds
TONGUE
- The tongue is a muscular organ located in the oral cavity.
- Thin nonkeratinized stratified squamous The core of the tongue consists of connective tissue and
epithelium [ except in the red portion of lip] interlacing bundles of skeletal muscle fibers.
- LP: loose lamina propria with fewer & shorter
-The distribution and random orientation of individual
papillae …..allows mobility over the underlying
skeletal muscle fibers in the tongue allows for increased
structures
movement during chewing, swallowing, and speaking.
- Permeability: greater permeability
- Clinical application: sublingual oral medications -The epithelium on the dorsal surface of the tongue is
, faster diffusion through the thin epithelium irregular or rough owing to numerous elevations or
and into the circulation projections called papillae. These are indented by the
- Vestibule ,floor of mouth , underside of tongue underlying connective tissue called lamina propria.
-All papillae on the tongue are covered by stratified
squamous epithelium that shows partial or incomplete
keratinization. In contrast, the epithelium on the ventral
surface of the tongue is smooth.
-There are four types of papillae on the tongue: filiform,
fungiform, circumvallate, and foliate.
2. Foliate Papillae
4 types: -Parallel low ridges separated by deep mucosal clefts
1. filiform papillae 2. foliate papillae -Posterior lateral edge of tongue with many taste buds
4. circumvallate papillae 3. fungiform papilla
-Small serous glands [ von Ebner ] empty into the clefts
-Non –keratinized SSQ
1. Filiform Papillae
3. Fungiform Papillae
- Posteriorly bent conical projections of the epithelium
-Project above filiform papillae & are seen as small red spots
-Most numerous, smallest along anterior dorsum of tongue scattered among them.
- Highly keratinized SQE with no taste buds -More numerous near tip of tongue
- Form rows divergent from the midline -Presence of taste buds on the free surface of the papillae
-Highly vascularized CT core
- Taste buds are wider at the base with their narrow
apices converging into small opening in the superficial
layers of the epithelium , called Taste Pore
- Present also in glossopalatine arch,soft
palate,posterior wall of pharynx down to level of
cricoid cartilage
PALE OVOIDAL
BODIES
4. Circumvallate Papillae
- 8 -12 Dome shaped structure found in the mucosa anterior
to sulcus terminalis
- Moat-like [trench] invaginatiion lined with SSQ with many
taste buds
3 PRINCIPAL CELL TYPES
- Serous glands[von Ebner’s] empty into the base of moats
1. Neuroepithelial [sensory ] cells :
- most numerous
- from basal lamina to the taste pore
- at their base they form synapse with afferent
sensory neurons of facial nerve [VII]
,glossopharyngeal [IX] or vagus [ X ] nerves.
- 10 days turnover rate
TASTE BUDS
- 3000 taste buds in human tongue
2. Supporting Cell
- Pale ovoid bodies against darker staining lingual
- less numerous
epithelium
- elongated cells that extend from basal lamina to the TEETH
taste pore
- do not synapse with nerve cells
- 10 days turnover time
3. Basal cells
-small cells located in the basal porting of the taste
bud, near the basal lamina
- stem cells for the 2 other cell types
Deciduous – 20
shedding – 6th to 13th yr
Permanent - 16 maxilla
[ Succedaneous ] - 16 mandible
18th year or so - Full dentition with eruption of 3rd
molar [ wisdom tooth ]
Parts of adult tooth
Gross division:
crown
5 BASIC TASTE SENSATIONS Neck or cervix
-Sweet, bitter, sour salty, umami Root
- tip of tongue – sweet and salty Histologic division:
- back of tongue – bitter Hard portion – 3 specialized tissues
- lateral side – sour a. enamel
b. dentin
Nerve supply of the tongue: c. cementum
Motor nerve supply: extrinsic and intrinsic Soft portion – dental pulp, periodontal
membrane, gingiva
muscles are supplied by hypoglossal nerve
(exception: palatoglossus supplied by vagus
nerve via its pharyngeal branch)
General sensory nerve supply: lingual nerve
(branch of V3) anterior ⅔; glossopharyngeal
nerve posterior ⅓; vagus nerve (via internal
laryngeal nerve) small area adjacent to
epiglottis
Special sensory nerve supply (taste): facial nerve
(via chorda tympani) anterior ⅔;
glossopharyngeal nerve posterior ⅓ (including
vallate papillae); vagus nerve (via internal
laryngeal nerve) small area adjacent to
epiglottis
INTERPRISMATIC SUBSTANCE
ENAMEL PRISMS[RODS]
Enamel
- Hardest substance in the body DENTIN
- 96 – 98% calcium hydroxyapatite
- Bluish white and nearly transparent -Produced by neural-crest derived Odontoblasts of the
- Produced by ameloblasts of the enamel organ adjacent mesenchyme
- Enamel organ – epithelial formation derived - Semi-translucent ,slightly yellow in color
from ectodermal epithelial cells of oral cavity -Calcified material that forms most of tooth substance
- Dental enamel is formed by matrix-mediated -20% organic,80% inorganic matter
biomineralization process called amelogenesis -Organic portion is 92% collagen
[secretory and maturation] -ODONTOBLASTS - are columnar dentin producing cells
- LM: enamel consists of thin enamel rods or that form an epithelial layer around the periphery of
prisms with interprismatic regions. Around each the pulp cavity immediately beneath the inner surface
rod is a thin clear layer of organic matrix called of the dentin
enamel sheath or prismatic rod sheath - Predentin- unmineralized zone of collagen fibers
-Dentin- thicker birefringent collagen fibers
…dentinal tubules…calcification
AMELOBLASTS
ODONTOBLASTS
ENAMEL PRISMS
GROUND SECTION OF TOOTH
- Calcification of developing dentin is not uniform
with persistence of angular spaces containing
organic matrix of dentin…interglobular spaces …
- Granular layer of Tomes - dentinocemental
junction
- Contour lines of Owen – dentinoenamel junction
- Fiber of Tomes CEMENTUM
-mineralized tissue resembling bone
-consists of: calcified matrix of collagen fibers,
glycoprotein and mucopolysaccharides
-cementocytes, cemetoblasts
KORFF’S FIBERS
[ BETWEEN PULP CAVITY & ODONTOBLASTS ]
SALIVARY GLANDS
-MAJOR SALIVARY GLANDS: [paired glands]
o Parotid gland – stensen’s duct
o Submandibular gland – wharton’s duct
o Sublingual gland – many small excretory
ducts
DENSE LAYER OF COLLAGEN
PERIODONTAL LIGAMENT
SALIVARY GLANDS
MINOR SALIVARY GLANDS:
-buccal, labial, lingual, molar, palatine glands
-are located in the submucosa and open directly or via shot
ducts onto the surface of the oral epithelium
-they secrete continuously, contributing to the saliva that
DENTAL PULP moistens and lubricates the oral cavity
-pulp interstitium SALIVON
-pulp cells -basic secretory unit of salivary glands
-nerves responsible for tootache -consists of: acinus, intercalated duct, and excretory duct
-ACINUS: blind sac composed of secretory cells:
a. serous acini
b. mucous acini
c. mixed acini
Salivary ducts
a. Intercalated duct – which leads from the acinus
a] low cuboidal epithelium
b] more prominent in serous glands
c] short & difficult to identify in mucous glands
b. Striated duct – have “striations” or infoldings of basal
plasma membrane of the columnar cells that form the duct
a] simple cuboidal epithelium that becomes columnar
as it nears the excretory duct
b] located in parenchyma of glands [ interlobular ducts]
c. excretory duct – larger ducts that employ into the oral
cavity
a] principal ducts of each major glands
b] small ducts – simple cuboidal that gradually
changes to pseudostratified columnar or stratified
cuboidal epithelium ….stratified squamous
epithelium maybe present as duct nears the oral
epithelium.
PAROTID GLAND completely serous
SUBLINGUAL DUCT – mixed glands that are mostly mucous
secreting in humans
SUBMANDIBULAR GLAND
-mixed glands that are mostly serous in humans
Left – mixed acini with demilune
Right – striated duct
TACBSMTTWOA