Sublingual gland

Sublingual Gland

Dissection, showing salivary glands of right side. (Sublingual gland visible near bottom right.)

Salivary glands: #1 is Parotid gland, #2 is Submandibular gland, #3 is Sublingual gland
Details
System Digestive system
Artery Sublingual artery (branch of lingual artery of external carotid artery)
Nerve Submandibular ganglion
Lymph Submandibular lymph nodes
Identifiers
Latin Glandula sublingualis
MeSH A03.556.500.760.687
Dorlands
/Elsevier
12392700
TA A05.1.02.008
FMA 59791

Anatomical terminology

The paired sublingual glands are major salivary glands in the mouth. They are the smallest, most diffuse, and the only unencapsulated major salivary glands. They provide only 3-5% of the total salivary volume.[1]

Structure

They lie in front of to the submandibular gland below to the tongue, as well as beneath the mucous membrane of the floor of the mouth. The glands can be felt behind each mandibular canine. Placing one index finger within the mouth and the fingertips of the opposite hand outside it, the compressed gland is manually palpated between the inner and outer fingers.[2]

The sublingual glands are drained by 8-20 excretory ducts called the ducts of Rivinus.[3] The largest of all, the sublingual duct (of Bartholin) joins the submandibular duct to drain through the sublingual caruncle. The sublingual caruncle is a small papilla near the midline of the floor of the mouth on each side of the lingual frenum.[2] Most of the remaining small sublingual ducts open separately into the mouth on an elevated crest of mucous membrane, the plica sublingualis, formed by the gland and located on either side of the frenulum linguae.

Microanatomy

The sublingual gland consists mostly of mucous acini capped with serous demilunes and is therefore categorized as a mixed mucous gland with a mucous product predominating. Striated and intercalated ducts are also present.[1]

Blood supply

The gland receives its blood supply from the sublingual and submental arteries.[3] Lymph from the sublingual salivary gland drains into the submandibular lymph nodes.[2]

Nerve supply

The chorda tympani nerve (from the facial nerve via the submandibular ganglion) is secretomotor and provides parasympathetic supply to the sublingual glands. The path of the nerve is as follows: junction between pons and medulla, through internal acoustic meatus and facial canal to chorda tympani, through middle ear cavity, out petrous temporal to join the lingual nerve, travels with lingual nerve to synapse at the submandibular ganglion, then postganglionic fibers travels to the sublingual gland.

Development

The sublingual salivary glands appear in the eighth week of prenatal development, two weeks later than the other two major salivary glands. They develop from epithelial buds in the sulcus surrounding the sublingual folds on the floor of the mouth, lateral to the developing submandibular gland. These buds branch and form into cords that canalize to form the sublingual ducts associated with the gland. The rounded terminal ends of the cords form acini.[1]

Clinical significance

Ranulas are the most common pathologic lesion associated with the sublingual glands.[4]

Additional images

References

  1. 1 2 3 Illustrated Dental Embryology, Histology, and Anatomy, Bath-Balogh and Fehrenbach, Elsevier, 2011, page 136-137
  2. 1 2 3 Illustrated Anatomy of the Head and Neck, Fehrenbach and Herring, Elsevier, 2012, p. 156
  3. 1 2 Ten Cate's Oral Histology, Nanci, Elsevier, 2013, page 255
  4. Hupp JR, Ellis E, Tucker MR (2008). Contemporary oral and maxillofacial surgery (5th ed.). St. Louis, Mo.: Mosby Elsevier. pp. 410–411. ISBN 9780323049030.
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