Anatomy And Physiology Of Salivary Glands
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Transcript Anatomy And Physiology Of Salivary Glands
Dr. Supreet Singh Nayyar, AFMC
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Anatomy of Parotid, Submandibular, Sublingual
glands
Physiology – structure of glands, secretion of
primary fluid, neuronal control,
neurotransmitters
Factors affecting salivary flow & composition
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3 Pairs – Major
salivary glands
Parotid
Submandibular
Sublingual
Collection of salivary
tissue within oral
mucosa – Minor
salivary glands
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Ectoderm of oral cavity
Solid bulb from oropharyngeal epithelium
6 weeks - parotid gland
Dichotomous branching of solid bulb,
development of lumen, condensation of
mesenchyme
Formation of primitive ducts
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Engulfment of facial nerve – 16th- 21st wk
Functional maturation after feeding is
established
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Lobulated, “inverted
pyramid”, extent
Superficial, deep lobes
Parotid space
Borders - ant, post
Surfaces – superficial,
superior, anteromedial,
posteromedial
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Condensed deep cervical fascia, tough,
inelastic surface component, thin deep layer
Stylomandibular ligament
Fibrous septa arise from capsule
Contents of fascia – superficial lymph nodes,
greater auricular nerve
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• Facial nerve,
division of gland
• Retromandibular
vein, anterior and
posterior divisions
• External carotid
artery, terminal
branches
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Capsule – Periparotid Nodes
Mostly superficial to Facial Nerve
Part of MALT, secrete IgA
Salivary gland tissue may be present within the
lymph nodes
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Stylomastoid foramen
Methods of identification
during surgery
TM Sulcus
PBD
Tragal pointer
Mastoid
Retrograde
Styloid process
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Varied, Surgically
important
Single trunk, divides into
Zygomaticotemporal,
Cervicomandibular
Temporal, upper / lower
zygomatic, buccal
Buccal, cervical,
mandibular
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Type1-5 ( Katz and Catalano, 1987)
Type 1 (25%) – No anastomotic links
Type 2 (14%) – Buccal fuses distally with Zygomatic
Type 3 (44%) – Major communication between Buccal &
others
Type 4 (14%) – Anastomosis between major divisions
Type 5 (3%) – More than one Facial Nv trunk
Unpredictable preoperatively, to be precisely
defined during surgery
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Parasympathetic
Inferior salivatory nucleus
IX nerve
Lesser Petrosal nerve
Otic ganglion
Sympathetic
Superior cervical ganglion
Plexus around ECA
PAROTID
Auriculotemporal nerve
PAROTID
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Formed near the anterior
border
Lies on superficial
surface of Masseter
Opens in the mouth at
parotid papilla
Accessory Parotid tissue
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Development
6th IU wk
Ectoderm in floor of primitive oral cavity
Lateral to primitive tongue
Development of acini – 12th wk
Large superficial, small deep lobe
Located in Submandibular triangle
Well defined capsule
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Superficial Lobe
Inferior surface –
Digastric, Deep fascia,
Platysma, Skin
Lateral surface –
Submandibular fossa,
Facial artery
Medial surface – Mylohyoid,
Hyoglossus, Lingual nerve, XII
nv, Submandibular ganglion,
Deep lingual vein
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Extends for a variable distance between
Mylohyoid & Hyoglossus
Relations
Superior – Lingual nerve
Inferior – XII Nv, Deep lingual vein, Submandibular duct
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5 cm in length
Middle of deep part
Crosses Sublingual space
Proximally – b/w Mylohyoid & Hyoglossus
Distally – b/w Genioglossus & Sublingual gland
Opening – on sides of frenulum of tongue
Relation to Lingual nerve
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Branches of Facial & Lingual arteries
Lymph nodes adjacent to the superficial part
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Parasympathetic
Superior Salivary Nucleus
Nervus Intermedius
Facial Nerve
Chorda Tympani
Lingual Nerve
Sympathetic
Superior Cervical Ganglion
Plexus around Facial Artery
Submandibular Ganglion
SUBMANDIBULAR GLAND
Submandibular Ganglion
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Skin incision – 4 cm below Mandible
Ligation of Facial vessels above & below
Dissected away from Lingual Nerve
Lymph nodes in substance of gland
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Development
8th wk
Epithelial buds present
in paralingual sulcus
Almond shaped
Located in anterior
part of floor of
mouth
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Sup – Oral floor mucosa
Inf – Mylohyoid
Post – Deep part
Med – Lingual nerve,
Lat– Med surface of lower
Submandibular gland
Submandibular duct,
Genioglossus
Mandible
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Ducts
Multiple
Drain into oral cavity directly or into Submandibular
duct
Blood supply
Nerve supply
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Produce saliva – 1L / day (1ml/min/gm)
Contents
Mucin (glycoprotein)
Salivary amylase
Secretory Immunoglobulins
Other enzymes – DNase, RNase, lysozyme,
lactoperoxidase, lingual lipase
Kallikerin
Inorganic compounds – Na+, K+, HCO3-, Ca2+
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Lubrication and protection
Buffering and clearance
Maintenance of tooth integrity
Antibacterial activity
Taste and digestion
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Parotid
Largest, serous (Compound Tubuloacinar Gland)
Submandibular and Sublingual
Mixed (Compound Tubuloacinar Glands)
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Serous Acini
◦ Pyramid shaped, basal
nucleus, apical
secretory granules
Mucus Acini
◦ Larger, columnar cells,
basal nucleus
Mixed Acini
◦ Mucus acini capped by
serous cells forming
Serous Demilunes
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Acini
Intercalated Ducts
Striated Ducts
Interlobular Excretory Ducts
Stenson’s, Wharton’s duct
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High rates
Rate of saliva production – 1ml/min/gm
Blood flow 10 times that of equal mass of
skeletal muscle
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Active transport process under neuronal
control
Composition
Hypotonic to plasma
Tonicity more when rates of production are high( at
max rate - 70% to that of plasma)
K+,HCO3- higher than in plasma
pH – acidic during resting phase, basic during active
phase(↑ HCO3- secretion)
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Acini – Primary Fluid Secretion
Isotonic to plasma, electrolyte composition fairly
constant, exocrine protein
Excretory ducts – extract Na+, Cl- and add K+,
HCO3- to saliva
No addition in volume
More of Na+, Cl- removed than addition of K+, HCO3responsible for hypotonicity
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Osmotic process
Transepithelial salt gradients
Four ion transport systems - luminal and basolateral
membranes generate the gradient
Three mechanisms proposed – operate concurrently
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Stimulation – rise in cytosolic
Ca2+
Opening of K+, Cl- channels –
KCl outflow
Cl- conc in lumen ↑, Na+,
H2O follow
Cl- entry sustained via
Na+K+2Cl- cotransporter
6 Cl- translocated to acinar
lumen per ATP hydrolysed by
Na+/K+ ATPase
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Cl-/HCO3-, Na+/H+ exchanger
KCl outflow
Cl- entry via Cl-/HCO3exchanger
Acidification buffered by
Na+/H+ exchanger
3 Cl- translocated to lumen per
ATP hydrolysed
Na+ & water follow into the
lumen
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Involves acinar HCO3secretion
3 HCO3- secreted per ATP
molecule
H+ extruded via Na+/Hexchanger
Na+, H2O follow into the
lumen
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Contained in zymogen granules present in
serous acinar cells, ductal cells
Upon stimulation release contents in lumen by
exocytosis
Conc and rate varies with level and type of
stimulation
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Inconstant, underlying mechanisms partially
understood
Produce final hypotonic solution
Influence of tubular cells more when flow rate
is slow
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Predominant control – PARASYMPATHETIC
Sympathetic stimulation shorter and less
strong
Probable synergistic action
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Primary fluid secretion
Protein secretion
Vasodilatation
Increased metabolism and growth
Myoepithelial cell contraction
LARGE VOLUME LOW PROTEIN OUTPUT
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High protein secretion
Vasoconstriction – decreased blood flow
Myoepithelial cell contraction
LOW VOLUME HIGH PROTEIN OUTPUT
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Parasympathetic
◦ Ach binds to M3
Receptors
◦ Activation of G protein►
Phospholipase C ►IP3 &
DAG ► Intracellular
Ca2+
release, Protein
exocytosis
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Sympathetic
◦ Noradrenaline binds to
α1, β1 receptors
◦ Activation of G protein ►
Adenylate Cyclase
activation
►↑cAMP dependant Protein
Kinase ►protein exocytosis
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Unstimulated – Submandibular
Stimulated – Parotid 2/3rd
Acidic tastes – Max stimulation
Sweet tastes – Least stimulation
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Psychic factors
Circadian rhythm
Diurnal variation
Age
Drugs
Tricyclic antidepressants
Phenothiazines
Depression and anxiety states
Dehydration, hemorrhage,
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Salivary Gland diseases
Radiation sialadenitis
Autoimmune sialadenitis
HIV infection
Iron overload
Sarcoidosis
Amyloidosis
Cystic fibrosis
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Flow rate
Source of secretion
Type of stimulus
Diurnal variation
Diet
Drugs – flow dependant components
Hormones – mineralocorticoids, ovulation
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Disease states
Sialadenitis
Radiation damage
Sjorgen’s syndrome
Cystic fibrosis
HTN
DM
Alcoholic cirrhosis
Aldosteronism
Chronic pancreatitis
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Valid medium, painless, non-invasive
Hormone monitoring
Unconjugated steroids
Proportional to free unbound plasma levels
Useful in field studies
Estradiol, progesterone, testosterone
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Drugs
Factors – lipid solubility, protein binding, molecular
size, flow rates
Constant saliva / plasma ratio not established
Microbial antigens, antibodies
Hepatitis A, B, C
HIV
Immunisation status
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Tc
99m
pertechnitate
Scintigraphy – objective measure of its uptake,
concenteration, excretion
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Concentric shells of calcareous material
alternating with organic material
Stasis of flow
Distribution
Submandibular gland – 92%
Parotid – 6%
Sublingual / minor salivary glands – 2%
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Scott-Brown’s Otolaryngology – 6th ed, Vol 1,
Vol 5
Otolaryngology Head & Neck Surgery –Charles
W Cummings, 4th ed, Vol 2
Skandalakis’ Surgical Anatomy
Last’s Anatomy – 9th ed
Physiology – Berne & Levy, 5th ed
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