Nasal and Oral Cavities Flashcards
(38 cards)
Where is the tongue positioned?
The tongue fills the floor of the mouth and is attached to the posterior of the ramus of the mandible and hyoid bone. The surface of the anterior ⅔ of the tongue lies against the palate and the posterior ⅓ against the posterior wall of the oropharynx.
What is the function of the tongue?
The tongue is covered with special sensory cells to detect sugar, salt, sour, bitter and umami.
What is the tongue’s sensory taste sensation innervated by?
Taste sensation from the anterior ⅔ of the tongue is carried in the facial nerve and the posterior ⅓ in the glossopharyngeal nerve.
What is the tongue’s general sensation innervated by?
The tongue also has general sensation: touch, vibration, hot, cold etc and these sensations are carried in the trigeminal nerve from the anterior ⅔ and the glossopharyngeal in the posterior ⅓.
What are is the motor function of the tongue innervated by?
The muscles of the tongue are supplied by the hypoglossal nerve.
What is the blood supply to the tongue?
The tongue’s blood supply is mostly from the lingual artery (a branch of the external carotid artery).
What is the palatine tonsil?
A consolidation of lymphoid tissue which samples organisms which may try to enter the body via the mouth or nose.
Where is the palatine tonsil located?
Located on the lateral wall of the oropharynx beyond the posterior third of the tongue. The lateral surface is covered by a fibrous capsule, and is separated from the superior constrictor of the tonsillar bed by loose areolar connective tissue.
What are the palatoglossal and Palatopharyngeal muscles?
They form the palatoglossal and palatopharyngeal folds which lie in front and behind the tonsillar fossa respectively.
What is a Tonsillectomy?
A surgical procedure in which both palatine tonsils are fully removed from the back of the throat. The procedure is mainly performed for recurrent throat infections and obstructive sleep apnea.
What are the Adenoids?
Adenoids are glands located in the roof of the mouth, behind the soft palate where the nose connects to the throat. The adenoids produce antibodies, or white blood cells, that help fight infections. Typically, the adenoids shrink during adolescence and may disappear by adulthood.
What are basics of the teeth?
Standardised mouth contains 32 teeth. In the adult mouth there are two incisors anteriorly, one canine, two premolars on each side, top and bottom.
What is the roof of the mouth?
The palate which separates the oral and nasal cavities.
What is the hard palate?
The anterior two thirds of the palate which is formed by the palatine processes of the maxillary bones anteriorly and the horizontal plates of the palatine bones posteriorly.
What is the soft palate?
The posterior third of the palate is muscular. The tensor palatine, levator palatine, musculus uvuli, palatoglossus and palatopharyngeus form the soft palate.
What is the function of the soft palate?
It’s function is to control the orifice between the nasal and oral parts of the pharynx. Elevation of the soft palate closes the orifice and this occurs during swallowing to stop reflux of food into the nasopharynx and during phonation to allow the production of explosion consonants.
What is the Eustachian tube?
A cartilaginous and bony tube that connects the middle ear to the nasopharynx. It acts to equalise the pressure of the middle ear to that of the external auditory meatus.
What is the nasal cavity?
Nasal cavity lies above the palate and communicates with the nasopharynx posteriorly. The bony sinuses, middle ear and tear duct all join the nasal cavity.
What are the functions of the nasal cavity?
Warms and humidifies the inspired air.
Removes and traps pathogens and particulate matter from the inspired air.
Responsible for sense of smell.
Drains and clears the paranasal sinuses and lacrimal ducts
What areas is the nasal cavity divided into?
Vestibule – the area surrounding the anterior external opening to the nasal cavity.
Respiratory region – lined by a ciliated psudeostratified epithelium, interspersed with mucus-secreting goblet cells.
Olfactory region – located at the apex of the nasal cavity. It is lined by olfactory cells with olfactory receptors.
What is the nasal septum?
The bone and cartilage in the nose that separates the nasal cavity into the two nostrils. The anterior part of the nasal septum is cartilage whereas the posterior is bony (vomer).
What are the nasal conchae?
Find them on a diagram
Projecting out of the lateral walls of the nasal cavity are curved shelves of bone, the nasal conchae. The are three conchae – inferior, middle and superior.
What is the function of the nasal conchae?
To increase the surface area of the nasal cavity – this increases the amount of inspired air that can come into contact with the cavity walls. They also disrupt the fast, laminar flow of the air, making it slow and turbulent. The air spends longer in the nasal cavity, so that it can be humidified.
What are the nasal meatuses?
The nasal conchae create four pathways for the air to flow. These pathways are called meatuses:
Inferior meatus – between the inferior concha and floor of the nasal cavity.
Middle meatus – between the inferior and middle concha.
Superior meatus – between the middle and superior concha.
Spheno-ethmoidal recess – superiorly and posteriorly to the superior concha (the olfactory nerve passes through here to the brain).