Tongue - Anatomy & Physiology
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Introduction
The tongue (lingua) occupies the ventral aspect of the oral cavity and oropharynx. It is involved with grooming, lapping, prehension and manipulating food in the oral cavity. It is also involved in the deglutition reflex and vocalisation. The tongue is capable of vigorous and precise movements due to the apex being free of attachments to the oral cavity.
Structure and Function
- Skeletal muscle dorsally
- Structural fat surrounded by cartilagenous sheath forming lyssa (canids only) ventrally
- Attached root and body with a free apex
- Frenulum (fold of mucosa) attaches the body of the tongue to the floor of the oral cavity
- Root of tongue attached to hyoid bone
- In the horse and dog the tongue is 'u' shaped, becoming broader towards the tip. The furrow in the centre of the canid tongue is called the median sulcus.
- In the ox, sheep and pig the tongue if 'v' shaped with a pointed apex. The torus linguae is a swelling across the tongue laterally which pushes food against the hard palate.
Muscles
Intrinsic Muscles
- The dorsal and ventral longitudinal
- Transverse and vertical bundles
Extrinsic Muscles
- Styloglossus
- Origin: Hyoid apparatus (stylohyoid)
- Retracts and elevates tongue
- Genioglossus
- Origin: Incisive part of mandible
- Protrudes and depressed tongue
- Hyoglossus
- Origin: Hyoid apparatus (basihyoid)
- Retracts and depresses tongue
- Geniohyoideus
Innervation
- All muscles moving the tongue are innervated by the hypoglossal nerve (CN XII)
- Rostral 2/3 of tongue is innervated by the lingual branch of trigeminal (CN V) which is sensory supplying temperature, touch and pain. The chorda tympani of facial (CN VII) supplies the taste.
- The caudal 1/3 of tongue is innervated by the glossopharyngeal (CN IX) providing motor function for taste.
Vasculature
- The main blood supply to the tongue is via the lingual artery- a branch of the external carotid artery
- A secondary blood supply to the tongue is provided via the tonsillar branch of the facial artery and the ascending pharyngeal artery
Histology
- Stratified squamous epithelium
- Lingual glands
- Mucosal covering tightly adheres to the contact surface
- Degree of keratinisation depends on diet
- Less keratinisation on ventral surface and sides of tongue
- Covered by papillae (taste buds)for protection and taste
- Papillae are specialised projections of the mucosa
- Some papillae have taste buds others are mechanical to roughen surface of tongue
Types of Papillae
Conical
- Not in horses
- Caudal 1/3 of tongue
- Point caudally
- No taste buds
- Thick epithelium
Foliate
- 8 to 12 papillae in parallel folds, one either side of tongue midline
- Stratified squamous epithelium
- Caudal 1/3 of tongue
- Taste buds present
- Glands
- Lymphatics present
Vallate
- 3 to 6
- Often secondary papillae in taste buds
- Broad glands
- Caudal 1/3 of tongue
- Taste buds present
- Lymphatic tissue present
Fungiform
- Red dots on tongue surface
- Keratinised, stratified squamous epithelium
- Blood vessels
- Loss of heat via panting in dogs
- Rostral 2/3 of tongue
- Taste buds present
Filiform
- Most numerous
- Points caudally
- No taste buds
- No glands
- No lymphatics
- Smallest
- Thick keratin on stratified squamous epithelium
- Very prominent in cat
- Rostral 2/3 of tongue
Taste Buds
- Also found on the soft palate and pharynx (but sparsely distributed)
- Constant cell turnover
- Flat, thick cells
- Taste hairs (microvilli) pointing though taste pore
- Nerves transduce chemical signals into nervous signals
Species Differences
Canine
- Stretch receptors in the tongue
- Uses the tongue to lose heat by panting
Ruminant
- Tongue is heavily keratinised with long papillae for eating (protective surface)
- Ox has lenticular papillae which are hard and horny due to heavy keratinisation
Feline
- Long papillae for grooming so tongue is rough
Porcine
- Most of the papillae are soft, long and directed caudally
Avian
- There is a bone present
- It is mainly used for manipulation of food rather than vocalisation like in mammals
- Parrots use the tongue to produce human sounds (see here)