Basic Things to Know About Parotid Surgery
Parotid
Surgery is needed to get
rid of this disease. Everyone knows that salivary
glands can mostly be severe, mucous, or secretive. Mucus is an ingredient
thick, clear, and slightly slimy. Serous secretions are more liquid opalescent
fluids consisting of water and proteins such as amylase digestive enzymes. The
glands may be specific, only containing one of those two substances, depending
on the cell type present, or they can be mixed, giving combinations of both
secretions. The presence of thought, or smell of food, as well as thermal
stimulation, can increase the separations.
Besides small tongue, palate, lips, and
cheeks, humans have three major glands that are opened in the mouth by
well-developed ducts:
·
The largest of the three Parotid Surgery lies between the ear and the upward branch of the lower jaw. The
tissue capsules of every gland consist of fatty tissue and cells that mostly
secrete serous fluids.
·
In the rear of the oral cavity, near the
second upper molar, each gland's main duct opens. On this side of the bass jaw,
the second couple is the submaxillary glands, also known as the submandibular
glands. Each major conduit opens into the mouth floor at the junction where the
tongue's front reaches the ground of the mouth. Each of the glands also has a
tissue capsule that produces mostly serious mixed secretions.
·
The third pair, the sublingual glands, is
underneath the mouth-floor mucous membrane, near the chin. They have many
conduits empty near the tongues and floors of the mouth; several units to form
Bartholin, the main conduit in or near the submaxillary conduit of the
sublingual gland.
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