Submandibular gland

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Overview

Submandibular gland
Salivary glands: #1 is Parotid gland, #2 is Submaxillary gland, #3 is Sublingual gland
Latin glandula submandibularis
Artery glandular branches of facial artery
Nerve submandibular ganglion
MeSH Submandibular+Gland
Dorlands/Elsevier g_06/12392708

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The paired submandibular glands (or submaxillary glands) are salivary glands located beneath the floor of the mouth. In humans, they account for 70% of the salivary volume.

Anatomy

Lying superior to the digastric muscles, each submandibular gland is divided into superficial and deep lobes, which are separated by the mylohyoid muscle.

  • The superficial portion is larger. The mylohyoid muscle is deep to it.
  • The deep portion is smaller. Secretions are delivered into Wharton's ducts on the deep portion, which crosses the lingual nerve, and opens into two papillae on either side of the lingual frenulum.

Histology

Human submaxillary gland. At the right is a group of mucous alveoli, at the left a group of serous alveoli.
Human submaxillary gland. At the right is a group of mucous alveoli, at the left a group of serous alveoli.

Lobes contain smaller lobules, which contain adenomeres, the secretory units of the gland. Each adenomere contains one or more acini, or alveoli, which are small clusters of cells that secrete their products into a duct. The acini of each adenomere are composed of either serous or mucous cells, with serous adenomeres predominating. Some mucous adenomeres may also be capped with a serous demilune, a layer of lysozyme-secreting serous cells resembling a half moon.

Like other exocrine glands, the submandibular gland can be classified by the microscopic anatomy of its secretory cells and how they are arranged. Because the glands are branched, and because the tubules forming the branches contain secretory cells, submandibular glands are classified as branched tubuloacinar glands. Further, because the secretory cells are of both serous and mucous types, the submandibular gland is a mixed gland, though it is mostly serous.

Functions

The secretory cells of the submandibular gland have distinct functions. In particular, the serous cells produce salivary amylase, which aids in the breakdown of starches in the mouth. Mucous cells secrete mucin which aids in the lubrication of the food bolus as it travels through the esophagus. The mucous cells are the most active and therefore the major product of the submandibular glands is viscous saliva.

The submandibular gland's highly active acini account for approximately 70% of salivary volume. The parotid and sublingual glands account for the remaining 30%.

Innervation

Sympathetic connections of the submaxillary and superior cervical ganglia.
Sympathetic connections of the submaxillary and superior cervical ganglia.

Their secretions, like the secretions of other salivary glands, are regulated directly by the parasympathetic nervous system and indirectly by the sympathetic nervous system.

  • The sympathetic nervous system regulates submandibular secretions through vasoconstriction of the arteries that supply it. Increased sympathetic activity reduces glandular bloodflow, thereby decreasing salivary secretions and produceing an enzyme rich serous saliva.

Pathology

The submandibular gland accounts for 80% of all salivary duct calculi, possibly due to the different nature of the saliva that it produces and that its duct is up-sloping.

Additional images

References

  • Douglas F. Paulsen (2000). Histology and cell biology, 4th edition, Stamford, Conn: Lange Medical Books/McGraw Hill. ISBN 0-8385-0593-7. 
  • A. R. Ten Cate (1998). Oral Histology: Development, Structure, and Function, 5th edition, Saint Louis: Mosby-Year Book. 

External links


de:Glandula submandibularis it:Ghiandola sottomandibolare sr:Подвилична жлезда


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Acknowledgement and Attribution Regarding Sources of Content

Some of the initial content on this page may be incorporated in part from copyleft sources in the public domain including wikis such as Wikipedia and AskDrWiki. Drug information for patients came from the The National Library of Medicine. Infectious disease information may have come from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC). Differential Diagnoses are drawn from clinicians as well as an amalgamation of 3 sources: 1.The Disease Database; 2. Kahan, Scott, Smith, Ellen G. In A Page: Signs and Symptoms. Malden, Massachusetts: Blackwell Publishing, 2004:3; 3. Sailer, Christian, Wasner, Susanne. Differential Diagnosis Pocket. Hermosa Beach, CA: Borm Bruckmeir Publishing LLC, 2002:7 .

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