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Dental Histology Exam 3
Paraoral + Respiratory
41
Medical
Professional
11/03/2008

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Cards

Term
What is the paraoral region?
Definition

-Nasal Cavities

-Maxillary Sinus

-Pharynx

-Larynx

Term

What is the general morpological structure of this area?

 

Definition

-Respiratory Ep. or Strat. Squemous Ep.

-Epithelium usually lies on lamina propria or CORIUM

-Ep. + corium = mucousa

-Some have a muscularis mucosa

-Surface coated by mucous by goblet cells

Term
Describe the over structure of the Nasal Cavity
Definition

-Box shaped

-Roof, floor, medial and lateral walls consisting of cartilage/bone covered in mucous membrane

-Boxex have openings in post. and ant. ends

 

-Ant. holes are nostrils

-Post. holes open to nasopharynx

Term
Nasal Cavity Medial Wall (SEPTUM)
Definition

Contain:

-Septal Cartilage

-Vomer bones

-Ethmoid bones

Term
Nasal Cavity Roof
Definition

Contains:

Cartilage and parts of several bones

Term
Nasal Cavity Floor
Definition

Contains:

-Palatine process of the maxilla

-Horizontal part of Palatine bone

Term

Nasal Cavity Lateral Wall

 

*Most Important*

Definition

-Uneven from 3 curved projections: CONCHAE

-Conchae contain turbinate bones

-Region beneath conchae is a MEATUS

-Foramina open into each meatus

 

*Maxillary Sinus opens into the MIDDLE MEATUS*

Term
3 regions of the Nasal Mucosa
Definition

1. Vestibule

2. Respiratory Area

3. Olfactory Area

Term
Nasal Mucosa VESTIBULE
Definition

-Lined by modified skin

-Anteriorly: keratanized strat. squam.

-Posteriorly: respiratory epithelium

-Contain long hairs calls VIBRISSAE

-Has sebaceous and sweat glands

Term
Nasal Mucosa Respiratory Region
Definition

-Respiratory Ep. on a Lamina Propria

-Lamina propria also contains glands, lymph tissue and large veins called "SWELL BODIES" (warm the air)

 

-Attached to bone without a submucosal layer. Arrangement known as:

 MUCOPERIOSTEUM and MUCOPERICHONDRIUM

 

Term
Nasal Mucosa Olfactory Region
Definition

-Ep. has sensory bipolar neurons (basal, sustentacular/supporting, orlfactory cells)

-Have apical dendrites and basal axons

-Dendritic processes with NON-motile cilia terminate at ep. as bulbs

-Cilia are odor receptors

-Axons aggregate to form olfactory nerve

-Bowman's glands in lamina propria cover cilia wih film

-Odors dissolve in secretion

Term
Maxillary Sinus
Definition

-Lined by Mucoperiosteum

-Thin plate of bone in floor that can be pierced by roots of teeth

-Maxillary formen is on medial wall of the sinus, high near roof

-Fluid must almsot fill cavity before drainage can occur

-Formen is narrow, tends to be blocked by swollen edematous mucosa

Term
Paranasal Sinuses Purpose
Definition

"Biologic Economy"

-Takes weight off the head

-Possibly assisting respiration (heating and humidifying air), olfaction and resonance

Term
Pharynx
Definition

-Tube enxtending from cranium into Larynx

-Openings into nose, mouth, larynx and esophagus

-Healthy: respiratory ep.

-Not Healthy: non-keratinised strat squamous

-Main wall component are the PHARYNGEAL CONSTRICTORS (skeletal muscle layer)

-Muscle layer coated externally by BUCCOPHARYNGEAL FASCIA

-Pharyngeal and Tubula tonsils are in the walls

 

Term
Larynx
Definition

-Located below the Pharynx

-Cartilage and skeletal muscle

-2 pairs of folds project into lumen:

1. Upper Ventricular/Vestibular/False fold

2. Lower True Vocal Fold

-Lined by Resp. Ep. everywhere EXCEPT True vocal fold + epiglottis (non-k strat squam)

-Lamina propria has glands and lymph tissue

Term
Vocal Folds/Cords
Definition

-Have vocal ligaments near free margin of folds

-Ligaments are dense regular elastic CT

-Skeletal muscle layer is attached to outer surface of ligament

-Vocalis muscle is a bundle of skeletal muscle parallel to the ligaments

-Assists in altering tension of the folds

-Non-K strat squam. lines folds

Term
What are the conducting passages?
Definition

-The region of the respiratory system that extends from the nostrils to the terminal bronchioles

Includes:

-Nasal cavity

-Paranasal sinuses

-Pharynx

-Larynx

-Trachea

-Bronchi

-Bronchioles

Term
What is the branching pathway of the conducting passages?
Definition
Larynx -> trachea -> 2 extrapulmonary PRIMARY bronchi -> Enter lungs at HILUS -> Right lung divides into 3 SECONDARY bronchi, Left divides into 2 SECONDARY bronchi -> Each bronchus divides 9-12 times into secondary LOBAR bronchi -> Each Lobar bronchi supplies 1 lobe -> Intrapulmonary bronchi become smaller -> Become bronchioles
Term
Tissue Layers
Definition

 

-Trachea and Bronchi = Resp. Ep, lamina propria with glands and lymph issue, Submucosa (has mucous glands), cartilage + adventitia

 

-Layers get thinner in distal regions

 

-Bronchioles = Simple cubiodal/columnar and NO cartilage, mucous glands or lymph tissue

Term
Cells Types in the Trachea
Definition

-Ciliated Columnar

-Goblet

-Basal

-Brush (receptor cells with microvili but NO cilia)

-Dense Core Granule (Part of AUPD-diffuse neuroendocrine system, associated with nerve endings)

Term
Trachea Structure
Definition

-Elastic fibers mark border of Lamina P. and Submucosa

-U shaped horizontal Cartilage external to submucosa

-U's connected by smooth muscle

-NO CARTILAGE ON POSTERIOR SIDE

-Sheet of fibro-elastic tissue between each U

-Adventitia surrounds entire trachea

 

-EXTRAPULMONARY bronchi very similar

 

Term
Structural difference of Intrapulmonary Bronchi to Extra
Definition

1. Smooth muscle replaces elastic tissue ad LP/Submucosa border (they can fold when you DIE!)

2. Cartilage goes completely around, but fenestrated

Term
How does smoking screw up your bronchial lining?
Definition

-Respitory Ep can be replaced by Strat. Squam. called Metaplasia

-Continued irritation leads to Dysplasia (bad maturation of cells)

-Will lead to mitoses, enlarged dark nuclei and cancer. HOLY SHIT!

Term
Bronchioles
Definition

-Small, less than 1mm in diameter

-1 supplies a lobule, where it branches to form 5-6 Terminal Bronchioles

-TB's are the narrowest most distal part og the conducting pathway

 

Term
Bronchiole Structure
Definition

-Arise from small Bronchi

-NO cartilage, glands of lymph tissue

-Walls contain some elastic and MORE smooth muscle than bronchi

-Little/No CT, very close to parenchyma

-Large ones lined by Repiratory Ep.

-Have Neuroepithelial Bodies

Term
Bronchiole Neuroepithelial Bodies
Definition

- Clumps of 80-100 cells containing secretory granules and receive cholineric nerve endings

-Chemoreceptors that react to gas composition

-Possibly play role in repairing injured ep. cells

Term
Bronchiole breakdown
Definition

Bronchiole ->Terminal Bronchiole (thinnest without alveoli) -> Repiratory bronchiole (have alveoli in walls)

 

TB = Simple Ciliated Columna Ep.

-Also have Clara cells (non-cilated, secrete protective glycosaminoglycans)

Term
WHy are ciliated cells DISTAL to goblet cells? HMMM?
Definition

-Ciliated cells below goblet cells are able to sweep mucous produced by goblet cells UPWARD

-Smokers show goblet cell metaplasia (goblets can be distal from cilliated cells and mucous drains ino alveoli)

Term
What comprises the Respiratory (functional) Passages?
Definition
Respiratory bronchioles (which arise from terminal) ->they contain Alveolar Ducts within their walls ->the ducts contain Alveoli within their walls
Term
Respiratory Bronchioles
Definition

-Most proximal segment of functional passage

-Walls contain alveoli

-Walls lined by Simple Cub Ep. which is ciliated ONLY at crossover from Terminal to Respiratory Bronchiole

-Sections that lack alveoli have smooth muscle and fibroelastic CT under ep.

Term
Alveolar Ducts
Definition

-Continuous alveoli in tube shape

-Duct lumen covered by simple squamous

-Small segments of wall between adjacent alveoli contain smooth muscle + fibroelastic CT under ep.

Term
Alveoli
Definition

-Thin walled, with one wall absent so air can enter and leave

-Open into lumen of alveolar ducts ->alveolar sacs -> respiratory bronchioles

-Share a common walled called an Interalveolar Septum

Term
Alveolar Septae
Definition

-Walls/Septae have smooth muscle only at their entrances or "doorways"

-Covered with simple. sqam. on each 2 surfaces that face lumen

-There is 1 capillary between the 2 layers of ep. in each wall

 

Looks like this (Vertical bars are Septae):

 

|_|_|

Term
Air-Blood Barrier in THIN Septae Regions
Definition

-Alveolar Ep. is Directly adajacent to capilary endothelium

-Both are flattened Squamous

-Oxygen only transverses 2very thin lyaers of Ep. and 1 shared basal lamina

 

Term
Support Region of Alveolar Septae
Definition

-Areas of septae adjacent to thin regions are knowns as "Thick regions/Tissue Spaces"

-Contains some CT between Alveolar Ep. and Capillary endothelium

-CT contains elastic/reticular fibers and some fibroblast and macrophages

-Provides support to walls

Term
Damage to Alveolar Septae
Definition

-Emphysema is when huge air spaces arise from destroyed alveoli

-Dust can cause thinkening of walls from collagen deposition

-Both impair oxygenation of blood and can make you DIE!

Term
Cells of Alveolar Septae
Definition

-Most are Type I pneumocytes, part of ari-blood barrier

-Some are Type II, joind by desmosomes and Z occludens

-They secrete Surfactant which reduces surface tension (permits cells to slide over one another)

Term
Other Alveolar cells
Definition

-Macrophages phagocyte foregien debris. "Heart failure cells" contain Hemosiderin which is a break down product of RBC's (eat blood filling lungs)

-Septal CT contains some fibroblast and leukocytes

Term
Pulmonary Blood Supply
Definition

-Have Double blood supply-

-Pulmonary Artery brings deoxygenated blood from heart but doesn not supply actual cells

-Bronchial Artery coming off the aorta supplies the oxygen and nutrients for cells in lungs

Term
Pulmonary Lymphatic Drainage
Definition

-Have lots of lymph vessles which sometimes follow lymph nodes along bronchi

-All eventually drain into lymph nodes at the hilium

-This is also the route take by emboli of malignant bronchial cancer cells

Term
Pleural Sac
Definition

-Each lung covered by it

-Invaginated "balloon" with a fluid Pleural Cavity between inner Visceral Pleura membrane and outer Parietal Pleura membrane

-Mesothelium covers each layer facing the cavity so they slide over one another

 

-Infection can lead to scar tissue which can cause lung expansion/contraction issues

 

 

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