Salvia and Glands Flashcards

1
Q

What are the functions of salvia

A

Lubricant for mastication, swallowing and speech

Oral hygiene
- wash
- immunity - antibacterial/antiviral/antifungal
- buffer

Digestive enzyme
- aqueous solution necessary for taste

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2
Q

Why does the oral pH need to be maintained at pH 7.2

A

Bicarbonate/carbonate buffer system for rapid neutralisation of acids

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3
Q

What is the flow rate of salvia

A

0.3-7mL per minute

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4
Q

What is the daily secretion of saliva

A

800-1500mL in adults from major and minor glands

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5
Q

What is the role of serous secretion

A

alpha amylase

starch digestion

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6
Q

What is the role of mucus secretion

A

Mucins for lubrication of mucosal surface

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7
Q

How does saliva contribute to oral health

A

Lubrication - mucous coat

Mechanical cleaning - flow

Buffering salts - neutralise acid

Remineralisation - Ca2+ and PO43-

Defensive and digestive function - proteins

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8
Q

How does the defence system work in saliva

A

Mucosa - physical barrier

Palatine tonsils - lymphocytes subsets and dendritic cells - immune surveillance and resistance to infection

Salivary glands - saliva washes away food particles bacteria or viruses might use for metabolic support

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9
Q

Does oral mucosa and glands have a high or low blood flow rate

A

High

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10
Q

What is whole salvia compromised of

A

Salivary gland secretions

Blood

Oral tissues

Microorganisms

Food remnants

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11
Q

Describe the structure of salivary glands

A

Composed of two morphologically and distinct epithelial tissue

Acinar cells around
Ducts - collect to form large duct entering the mouth

Equipped with channels and transporters in the apical and basolateral membranes enabling transport of fluid and electrolytes

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12
Q

What are intralobular ducts divided into

A

Intercalated

Striated

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13
Q

Describe intercalated intralobular ducts

A

Short narrow duct segments with cuboidal cells that connect acini to larger striated ducts

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14
Q

Describe striated ducts

A

Striated like a thick lawn

Major site for reabsorption of NaCl

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15
Q

Describe the histology of striated ducts

A

Appear straited at the basal end

Basal membrane is highly folded into microvilli for active transport of HCO3 against the concentration gradient

Microvilli filled with mitochondria for energy to facilitate active transport

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16
Q

What is the composition of primary saliva

A

NaCl rich isotonic plasma-like fluid secreted by acini

17
Q

What is the role of the epithelium of the duct

A

Does not allow any water movement so final saliva becomes hypotonic

18
Q

What are the three pairs of major salivary glands

What percentage of salivary flow do these equate to

A

Parotid
Submandibular
Sublingual

80%

19
Q

What are the minor salivary glands

What % of salivary flow do these equate to

A

Submucosa of oral mucosa - lips, cheeks, hard and soft palate, tongue

20%

20
Q

What is the histology of parotid glands

A

Entirely serous acini with ducts interspersed

21
Q

Describe the course of the submandibular duct (Wharton’s duct)

A

Begins in superficial lobe

Wraps round free posterior border of mylohyoid

Runs along the floor of mouth

Empties into oral cavity at sublingual papillae

22
Q

Describe the histology of submandibular glands

A

Mixed gland with some serous and mucous acini

Some serous acini arranged as a crescent-shaped groups of glandular cells at the bases of mucous acini referred to as serous demilunes

23
Q

Describe the histology of the sublingual gland

A

Variable size with mixed acini - mainly mucous

No large duct - drains into submandibular

(Wharton’s) duct and/or small ducts that pierce oral mucosa on the floor of the mouth

24
Q

Where are minor salivary glands found

A

Concentrated in buccal labial, palatal and lingual regions

Also found at-
- superior pole of tonsils (Weber’s glands)
- tonsillar pillars
- base of tongue (von Ebner’s glands - underlying circumvallate papillae)

25
Q

What is the histology of minor salivary glands

A

All mucous expect serous glands of von Ebner

Lack a branching network of draining ducts - each salivary unit has own simple duct