Ella Elwood Flashcards

(162 cards)

1
Q

What type of epithelium is junctional epithelium

A

Stratified non keratinised

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2
Q

What type of epithelium is sulcular epithelium

A

Non keratinised stratified squamous

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3
Q

What type of epithelium is free gingiva

A

Keratinised stratified squamous

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4
Q

What type of epithelium is attached gingiva

A

Keratinised stratified squamous

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5
Q

What type of epithelium is lining mucosa

A

Non keratinised stratified squamous

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6
Q

How many basal laminar does junctional epithelium have

A

2 basal laminae, one against tooth and the other against connective tissue

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7
Q

What are properties of sulcular epithelium

2

A

Tooth facing

Distinct lamina propria

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8
Q

What are properties of free gingiva epithelium

3

A

Faces oral cavity
Has stippling
Distinct lamina propria

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9
Q

What are properties of attached gingiva

3

A

Faces oral cavity
Has stippling
Mucoperiosteum

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10
Q

What is the extra cellular matrix of gingival connective tissue composed of
2

A

Collagen fibres

Ground substance

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11
Q

What cells are present in gingival connective tissue

4

A

Fibroblasts
Macrophages
Mast cells
Neutrophils

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12
Q

What is stippling

A

Orange peel like texture due to presence of coarse collagen bundles attaching epithelium of the attached gingiva to underlying alveolar bone

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13
Q

What is the free gingival groove

A

The junction between the free and attached gingiva

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14
Q

What is the mucogingival junction

A

The junction between the attached gingiva and alveolar mucosa

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15
Q

What is transudate and where is it found

A

A filtrate of blood arising from an increased pressure in veins and capillaries that forces fluid through vessel walls against plasma osmotic pressure
Found in clinically healthy gingiva

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16
Q

What is exudate and where is it found

A

A fluid escaping from the intra vascular to extra vascular compartment containing proteins and cellular material in response to inflammation
Found in gingivitis

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17
Q

What is GCF

A

An inflammatory transudate

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18
Q

Which nerve goes through incisive foramen

Which artery goes through incisive foramen

A

Nasopalatine nerve

Sphenopalatine artery

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19
Q

Which nerve goes through greater palatine foramen

Which artery goes through greater palatine foramen

A

Greater palatine nerve

Greater palatine artery

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20
Q

Which nerve goes through lesser palatine foramen

What artery goes through lesser palatine foramen

A

Lesser palatine nerve

Lesser palatine artery

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21
Q

What part of the palate does the greater palatine foramen supply

What part of the palate does the lesser palatine foramen supply

A

Hard palate

Soft palate

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22
Q

What type of muscles make up the soft palate

A

Skeletal muscle

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23
Q

What muscles make up soft palate

4

A

Tensor veli paltini
Levator veli paltini
Palatoglossus
Palatopharyngeus

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24
Q

Inervation and action of tensor veli paltini

A

Mandibular nerve

Contracts to tense soft palate

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25
Pathway of tensor veli paltini
Arises outside pharynx from base of skull Passes down and hooks around hamulus Becomes flat triangular tendon that forms framework of soft palate
26
Innervation and action of levator veli paltini
Innervated by pharyngeal plexus of vagus nerve | Contracts to pull palate up
27
What is the pathway of levator veli paltini
Arises from petrous temporal bone and cartilaginous parts of eustacian tube Passes down towards soft palate
28
Innervation and action of palatoglossus
Innervated by pharyngeal plexus of vagus nerve | Contracts to pull palate down
29
Pathway of palatoglossus
From soft palate to lateral aspects of tongue
30
Innervation and action of palatopharyngeus
Innervated by pharyngeal plexus of vagus nerve | Contracts to pull palate down
31
Pathway of palatopharyngeus
From soft palate to lateral wall of pharynx
32
What type of epithelium lines hard palate
Keratinised stratified squamous epithelium
33
What type of epithelium lines soft palate
non Keratinised stratified squamous epithelium
34
What is the pharyngeal plexus
Network of nerve fibres inner sting most of palate and pharynx located on surface of middle pharyngeal constructor muscle
35
Which nerves does the pharyngeal plexus receive fibres from | 3
Vagus nerve- motor innervation to skeletal muscle of palate and pharynx Glossopharyngeal nerve- provides sensory and secretomotor innervation to pharyngeal mucosa and minor glands of pharynx Sympathetic chain of cervical branch of facial nerve
36
What are the features of healthy gingiva
``` Pale pink Stippled Firm Knife edge interdental papillae No bleeding on probing Full bone support Periodontal ligament attached to tooth at CEJ ```
37
How are the teeth divided for BPE
Sextants
38
What features have BPE 0
Black band remains completely visible No plaque retentive factors No bleeding on probing
39
What features have BPE score 1
Black band remains completely visible No plaque retentive factors Bleeding on probing
40
What features have BPE score 2
Black band completely visible | Plaque retentive factors
41
What features have BPE score 3
Black band partially visible
42
What features have BPE score 4
Black band completely disappears
43
What does a * mean
Furcations
44
What does BPE X mean
No teeth or only one tooth in sextant
45
How do you calculate total attachment loss
Probing depth+gingival recession = total attachment loss
46
What type of epithelium lines floor of mouth
Non keratinised stratified squamous epithelium
47
Where does mylohyoid muscle originate and insert
Origin Mylohyoid line Insertion Anterior three quarters of midline raphe and posterior quarter of superior body of hyoid bone
48
What anatomical structure do mylohyoid muscles form
Floor of mouth
49
What innervates mylohyoid muscle
The mylohyoid nerve, a motor branch of inferior alveolar nerve from mandibular division of trigeminal nerve
50
What artery supplies mylohyoid
Sublingual artery
51
Which gland is associated with the mylohyoid muscle
Submandibular gland
52
What innervates all extrinsic and intrinsic muscles of tongue
Hypoglossal nerve | Except palatoglossus which is innervated by vagus nerve
53
What innervates the anterior 2/3 of tongue
Taste innervated by chorda tympani branch of facial nerve Sensation innervated by lingual branch of mandibular branch of trigeminal nerve
54
What innervates posterior 1/3 of tongue
Glosopharyngeal nerve
55
What innervates base of tongue
Superior laryngeal nerve branching from vagus nerve
56
What are the types of papillae on anterior 2/3 of dorsum of tongue and their functions 4
Circumvallate papillae -taste Filiform papillae -mastication Fungiform papillae -taste Foliate papillae -taste
57
What type of mucosa is the ventral surface of the tongue lined with
Non keratinised oral mucosa with prominent vasculature in sub mucosa
58
Name the intrinsic muscles of the tongue | 4
Superior longitudinal Inferior longitudinal Transverse Vertical
59
What do superior longitudinal intrinsic tongue muscles do What do inferior longitudinal intrinsic tongue muscles do
Raise tip and sides and shorten tongue Curled tip down and shortens tongue
60
What do transverse intrinsic tongue muscles do What do vertical intrinsic tongue muscles do
Narrow and lengthen tongue Flattens and broadens tongue
61
What are the extrinsic muscles of the tongue | 4
Genioglossus Hyoglossus Styloglossus Palatoglossus
62
What does genioglossus extrinsic tongue muscles do What smooth hyoglossus extrinsic tongue muscles do
Raise tip and sides and shorten tongue Curl tip down and shorten tongue
63
What does styloglossus extrinsic tongue muscle do What does palatoglossus extrinsic tongue muscle do
Narrow and lengthen tongue Flatten and broaden tongue
64
Where does lymph from tip of tongue drain Where does lymph from anterior 2/3 of tongue drain Where does lymph from posterior 1/3 of tongue drain
Sub mental nodes Submandibular lymph nodes Jugulo omohyoid nodes
65
What are the prevalancies of gingivitis, chronic periodontitis and aggressive periodontitis
90% will get gingivitis 60% get chronic periodontitis 5-15% get aggressive periodontitis
66
Define gingivitis
Reversible inflammation of the gingivae with no accompanying destruction of the periodontal tissues
67
How long does initial gingivitis take to develop
2-4 days
68
What are the features of initial gingivitis | 5
Vascular dilation of blood vessels Moderate amounts of infiltration of polymorphonuclear neutrophils to junction and sulcular epithelium Predominant immune cell polymorphonuclear neutrophils Peri vascular collagen loss Increased GCF flow
69
How long does early gingivitis take to develop
5-7 days
70
What are the features of early gingivitis | 5
Vascular proliferation of blood vessels High amounts of infiltration of polymorphonuclear neutrophils to junctional and sulcular epithelium Collagen loss Predominant immune cells are lymphocytes Bleeding on probing
71
How long does established gingivitis take to develop
8-21 days
72
What are the features of established gingivitis | 5
Vascular proliferation and blood stasis Very high infiltration of polymorphonuclear neutrophils to junctional and sulcular epithelium Predominant immune cells are plasma cells Collagen loss Gingivae becomes red smooth shiny and inflamed
73
What are the key bacteria’s of periodontitis | 4
Aggregacibacter spp Porphyromonas spp Treponema spp Prevotella spp
74
What are the pathophysiological features of periodontal disease 5
``` Chronic inflammation Pocketing Epithelial migration Destruction of periodontal fibres Destruction of alveolar bone ```
75
What are the progressive stages of periodontal lesion | 4
Initial lesion Early lesion Established lesion Advanced lesion
76
What are the features of the initial periodontal lesion | 5
Periodontitis localised to gingival sulcus Vasculitis and oedima with fluid exudate in gingival sulcus Increased migration of leukocytes to gingival crevice Early changes in junctional epithelium Loss of peri vascular collagen
77
What are the features of early periodontal lesion | 3
Accentuated features of initial lesion Signs of basal cell proliferation in junctional epithelium Further collagen loss
78
What are the features of the established periodontal lesion | 5
Plasma cells become dominant cell type Extravascular immunoglobulins in connective tissue and junctional epithelium Proliferation and apical micration of junctional epithelium Pocket formation More Collagen loss
79
What are the features of the advanced periodontal lesion | 4
Bone and collagen loss Periodontal pockets Bone marrow converted to fibrous connective tissue Abscess formation and furcation
80
What is the difference between gram positive and gram negative bacteria
Gram positive have thick peptidoglycan cell wall with no lipopolysaccharides in outer membrane Gram negative have thin peptidoglycan cell wall with lipopolysaccharides in outer membrane
81
Which enzymes do obligate aerobes poses Which enzymes do facultative anaerobes poses Which enzymes do aerotolerant enzymes poses Which enzymes do obligate anaerobes poses
SOD and catalase SOD and catalase SOD -
82
What provides nutrients to supra gingival plaque
Diet and saliva
83
What is the main energy source of supra gingival plaque
Carbohydrates
84
What supplies nutrients to sub gingival plaque
Gingival crevicular fluid proteins
85
What are the differences between tooth associated and epithelium associated sub gingival plaque
Tooth associated plaque is densely packed and is associated with root caries, calculus and periodontal destruction Epithelium associated plaque is loosely adherent and associated with periodontal destruction
86
What properties make the sub gingival environment a niche | 4
More anaerobic as it gets deeper Few mechanical forces to remove bacteria Environment relatively static Alkaline pH of 7.4-7.8
87
Compare sub gingival environment at gingival health and gingival inflammation 4
Low vs high plaque levels No inflammation vs inflammation Low GCF flow vs high GCF flow High redox potential vs low redox potential
88
What type of bacteria are present in the healthy gingival sulcus
Mainly gram positive cocci
89
Name the bacteria in healthy gingival sulcus | 5
``` Streptococcus sanguinis Streptococcus oralis Actinomycetes naesludil Actinomycetes viscosus Veilonella spp ```
90
What type of bacteria are present in gingivitis
More gram negative | Half gram positive cocci
91
Name bacteria’s present in gingivitis | 6
``` Streptococcus spp Actinomycetes ssp Prevotella intermedia Capnocytophaga spp Fusobacterium nucleatum Veilonella spp ```
92
What is the key bridging species of periodontitis
Fusobacterium nucleatum
93
What type of bacteria are present in periodontitis
75% gram negative, mostly obligate anaerobes | Predominantly motile rods and spirochetes
94
What is the red complex and which three bacteria’s are part of it
Red complex: associated with progression of periodontal disease Porphyromonas gingivalis Tanerella forsythia Treponema denticola
95
What are the clinical features of periodontal pocket | 3
Over 3mm Apical migration of junctional epithelium Bone loss
96
What does the mandibular nerve supply sensory innervation to
Lower 1/3 of face Lower jaw Anterior 2/3 of tongue
97
What does the mandibular nerve supply motor innervation to
Muscles of mastication
98
What is found in meckels cave/trigeminal fossa?
Trigeminal ganglion containing sensory cell bodies
99
What nerve passes through foramen ovale and between which areas
Mandibular nerve | From middle cranial fossa to inferior cranial fossa
100
What nerve passes through foramen rotundum and between which two areas
Maxillary nerve | From middle cranial fossa to pterygopalatine fossa
101
What passes through foramen spinosum
Meningeal branch of mandibular nerve/ nervus spinosus
102
Which nerves pass through superior orbital fissure | 4
Ophthalmic nerve Oculomotor nerve Abducens Trichoclear nerve
103
What is the lingula
Lip of bone protecting mandibular foramen
104
What passes through mandibular foramen
Inferior alveolar nerve
105
What passes through mental foramen
Mental nerve
106
What is the pterygomandibular raphe
A ligamentous band attached to posterior end of mylohyoid line
107
Where does the trigeminal nerve leave the brain stem
PONS
108
What is the pterygomandibular space
A potential space between medial pterygoid muscle and medial surface of ramus of mandible
109
What anatomical structures are located in pterygomandibular space 3
Mandibular division of trigeminal nerve Inferior alveolar artery and vein Spenomandibular ligaments
110
Which nerves/branches form the anterior division of the mandibular nerve 4
Massateric nerve Temporal nerves Nerve to lateral pterygoid Buccal nerve
111
Which nerves / branches form the posterior division of the mandibular nerve 5
``` Auriculotemporal nerve Lingual nerve Chorda tympani Inferior alveolar nerve Mylohyoid nerve ```
112
Which nerves branch from trunk of mandibular nerve | 2
Meningeal branch/nervus spinosum | Nerve to medial pterygoid
113
What is Hilton’s law
A nerve supplying joint with sensation will be the same nerve supplying the muscles of the joint
114
Which foramen does the vagus nerve pass out of
Jugular foramen
115
Which nerves pass through the anterior division of the jugular foramen 2
Inferior petrosal sinus | Glossopharyngel nerve
116
Which nerves pass through middle division of the jugular foramen 2
Vagus nerve | Accessory nerve
117
Which structure passes through posterior division of jugular foramen
Sigmoid sinus
118
What are the functions of the vagus nerve | 5
Innervates mexhanoreceptors in gag reflex Taste Innervates constrictors of pharynx Innervates muscles of larynx Innervates all muscles of soft palate except tensor paltini
119
What fibres form pharyngeal plexus
Some motor fibres of vagus nerve | Fibres from cranial component of accessory nerve
120
What does the pharyngeal plexus do
Provides sensory innervation to oropharynx and laryngopharynx and motor innervation to levator paltini, palatoglossus and palatopharangeus
121
What are the branches of the vagus nerve | 5
``` Auricular branch Pharyngeal branch Superior laryngeal branch Recurrent laryngeal nerve Sinus nerve ```
122
What is the role of superior laryngeal nerve
Sensation to larynx above vocal folds and motor innervation to cricothyroid
123
What is the pathway of recurrent laryngeal nerve
Branches in thorax Re enters neck Passes upwards to enter larynx
124
What does recurrent laryngeal nerve innervate
Supplies sensation to mucous membrane below vocal folds and motor innervation to intrinsic muscles of larynx
125
What type of tissues bone
Connective tissue
126
What are the components of bone | 3
Extra cellular matrix of primarily type 1 collagen in highly organised fibres Ground substance of non collagenous proteins- glycoproteins, proteoglycans Hydroxyapatite crystals
127
What is osteoid Which components of bone make up osteod
The unmineralised organic matrix secreted by bone building cells (osteoblasts) Extra cellular matrix of type 1 collagen Ground substance with glycoproteins and proteoglycans
128
Functions of bone | 5
``` Protection Support Movement Reservoir Blood cell formation ```
129
What minerals in bone give it strength | 2
Calcium | Phosphorus
130
What are the types of bone | 3
Cortical Trabecular bone Woven bone
131
What percentage of skeletal mass is cortical bone
80%
132
What is the primary structural unit of cortical bone
Osteon
133
What is the structure of cortical bone
Solid bone with only few small canals | Surrounds trabecular bone
134
What are properties of cortical Bone | 3
Bundles of collagen fibres organised into sheets or lamellae Remodelled from woven bone by vascular channels Forms internal and external parts of flat bones and external surfaces of long bones
135
What percentage of skeletal mass is trabecular bone
20%
136
What are properties of trabecular bone
Present on inside of bones Less dense and more elastic than cortical bone Higher turnover rate than cortical bone Makes up most bone tissue of axial skeleton
137
What is the structure of trabecular bone
Scaffold like honey comb structure with spaces filled with bone marrow cells
138
Properties of woven bone
Immature Found during embryonic development, fracture healing and some pathological states Normally replaced with cortical bone Remains in tooth sockets and where tendons insert into bones
139
Structure of woven bone
Randomly arranged collagen bundles and irregular shaped vascular spaces lined with osteoblasts
140
What does the periosteum membrane cover
Covers and protects outer surface of bones not covered in cartilage
141
How is periosteum anchored to bone
Sharpeys collagen fibres
142
How many layers is periosteum made up of | What are the purposes of these
Double layered Inner layer is an osteogenic layer containing osteoblasts and osteoclasts Outer layer is a fibrous layer of dense irregular connective tissue proper for protection
143
What does endosteum membrane line
Bodies inner cavities that contain marrow or blood vessels
144
What is endosteum made up of
Mainly osteocytes and osteoclasts
145
What is intermembranous ossification
Mineralisation of tissue with differentiation of mesenchymal cells to osteoblasts
146
Where does intermembranous ossification occur
Within membranous plate of mesenchymal cells
147
What are the steps of intermembranous ossification | 3
At ossification centre mesenchymal cells differentiate into osteoblasts Osteoblasts deposit osteoid Thin sheet of woven bone called the periosteal collar is deposited around shaft of cartilage model
148
What is endochondral ossification
Formation of bone from cartilage into bone
149
Steps of endochondral ossification | 3
Periosteal bud invades cartilage model and allows mesenchymal cells to enter cartilage Invading mesenchymal cells mature into osteoblasts Osteoblasts deposit bone using framework of calcified cartilage
150
What do osteoblasts do
Form collagen, glycoproteins and proteoglycans of matrix and controls deposition of crystals on collagen fibrils
151
What do osteocytes do
Control extra cellular concentration of calcium and phosphorus
152
What do osteoclasts do
Large multi nucleated bone reabsorbing cells
153
``` What are the mineral contents of: Alveolar bone Cementum Dentine Enamel Pulp ```
``` 70% 70% 70% 96% 0% ```
154
How is periodontal disease treated | 5
``` Preventative techniques Bone grafts Tissue grafts Guided tissue regeneration Dentures ```
155
What makes collagen
Fibroblasts and some epithelial cells
156
What are the properties of collagen | 5
Contributes to stability of tissues and organs Maintains structural integrity of tissues and organs High tensile strength Involved in cell differentiation, polarity and movement Role in tissue and organ development
157
What is the primary structure of collagen | 4
Gly X Y: every third amino acid glycine which has no side chains and helps create tight turns Has carboxyl terminal ends involved in assembly of procollagen Hydroxyproline involved in H bonding Hydroxylysine involves in covalent bonding
158
What type of bond is involved in secondary structure of collagen
Hydrogen bonding
159
What is the tertiary structure of collagen
Triple helical rod molecule of procolagen Terminal ends C telopeotides N telopeptides
160
What is the quaternary structure of collagen
Collagen molecules align to form microfibrils, microfibrils align to form collagen fibres
161
What creates longitudinal alignment of microfibrils
C terminal aligns with N terminal with N always towards growing tip of fibril
162
What creates lateral alignment of microfibrils
C terminal ends with shaft of neighbouring molecule to create cross links