enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Submandibular gland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Submandibular_gland

    The paired submandibular glands (historically known as submaxillary glands) are major salivary glands located beneath the floor of the mouth.In adult humans, they each weigh about 15 grams and contribute some 60–67% of unstimulated saliva secretion; on stimulation their contribution decreases in proportion as parotid gland secretion rises to 50%. [1]

  3. Submandibular duct - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Submandibular_duct

    The submandibular duct (also Wharton's duct or historically submaxillary duct) is one of the salivary excretory ducts. It is about 5 cm long, and its wall is much thinner than that of the parotid duct. It drains saliva from each bilateral submandibular gland and sublingual gland to the sublingual caruncle in the floor of the mouth.

  4. Salivary gland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salivary_gland

    The submandibular glands (previously known as submaxillary glands) are a pair of major salivary glands located beneath the lower jaws, superior to the digastric muscles. [6] The secretion produced is a mixture of both serous fluid and mucus, and enters the oral cavity via the submandibular duct or Wharton duct. [7]

  5. Sialolithiasis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sialolithiasis

    Salivary stones may be divided according to which gland they form in. About 85% of stones occur in the submandibular gland, [3] and 5–10% occur in the parotid gland. [2] In about 0–5% of cases, the sublingual gland or a minor salivary gland is affected. [2]

  6. Sublingual gland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sublingual_gland

    The sublingual gland (glandula sublingualis) is a seromucous polystomatic exocrine gland. Located underneath the oral diaphragm (diaphragma oris), the sublingual gland is the smallest and most diffuse of the three major salivary glands of the oral cavity, with the other two being the submandibular and parotid. The sublingual gland provides ...

  7. Major sublingual duct - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Major_sublingual_duct

    The excretory ducts of the sublingual gland are from eight to twenty in number. Of the smaller sublingual ducts (ducts of Rivinus), some join the submandibular duct; others open separately into the mouth, on the elevated crest of mucous membrane (plica sublingualis), caused by the projection of the gland, on either side of the frenulum linguae.

  8. Ranula - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ranula

    The most usual source of the mucin spillage is the sublingual salivary gland, but ranulae may also arise from the submandibular duct or the minor salivary glands in the floor of the mouth. A cervical ranula occurs when the spilled mucin dissects its way through the mylohyoid muscle , [ 1 ] which separates the sublingual space from the ...

  9. Frenulum of the tongue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frenulum_of_the_tongue

    A hump of tissue near the base of the tongue houses a series of saliva gland ducts. The two largest ducts are called Wharton's Ducts and they empty the submandibular (submaxillary) and sublingual salivary glands into a small prominence on either side of the frenulum, the sublingual caruncle.