Top: Health: Senses: Taste


[ history ]

Overview

Taste is the ability to differentiate flavors of substances placed in the mouth. The primary organ involved in taste is the tongue, which possesses taste buds embedded along its carpet-like surface. Although the classic view of taste includes sweet, sour, salty, and bitter flavors, recent research has discovered more subtle variations of taste receptors on the tongue. The region behind the tongue also contains nerves that transmit taste information toward the brain. Smell is strongly linked with taste. A loss of one can affect the other. Complete loss of taste is not common due to the neuroanatomy of the taste organs, which receive three sets of nerves from both sides of the body.


[ history ]

Organs of Taste

The peripheral gustatory or taste organs consist of certain modified epithelial cells arranged in flask-shaped groups termed gustatory calyculi (taste-buds), which are found on the tongue and adjacent parts. They occupy nests in the stratified epithelium, and are present in large numbers on the sides of the papillæ vallatæ, and to a less extent on their opposed walls. They are also found on the fungiform papillæ over the back part and sides of the tongue, and in the general epithelial covering of the same areas. They are very plentiful over the fimbriæ linguæ, and are also present on the under surface of the soft palate, and on the posterior surface of the epiglottis.

Each taste bud is flask-like in shape, its broad base resting on the corium, and its neck opening by an orifice, the gustatory pore, between the cells of the epithelium. The bud is formed by two kinds of cells: supporting cells and gustatory cells. The supporting cells are mostly arranged like the staves of a cask, and form an outer envelope for the bud. Some, however, are found in the interior of the bud between the gustatory cells. The gustatory cells occupy the central portion of the bud; they are spindle-shaped, and each possesses a large spherical nucleus near the middle of the cell. The peripheral end of the cell terminates at the gustatory pore in a fine hair-like filament, the gustatory hair. The central process passes toward the deep extremity of the bud, and there ends in single or bifurcated varicosities. The nerve fibrils after losing their medullary sheaths enter the taste bud, and end in fine extremities between the gustatory cells; other nerve fibrils ramify between the supporting cells and terminate in fine extremities; these, however, are believed to be nerves of ordinary sensation and not gustatory.

The chorda tympani nerve, derived from the sensory root of the facial, is the nerve of taste for the anterior two-thirds of the tongue; the nerve for the posterior third is the glossopharyngeal.


[ history ]

based

1. Gray, Henry; Anatomy of the Human Body; Philadelphia; Lea & Febiger; 1918. [ISBN: 1-58734-102-6]



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