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Our saliva plays a crucial role in facilitating our sense of taste. Without it, the ten thousand taste buds on our tongues would be useless for tasting any dry food, because food molecules need to be dissolved in liquid before they can be detected by the receptors on our taste buds.
Contrary to popular belief, the visible bumps on our tongues are not taste buds, which are too small to be seen by the naked eye. The bumps are actually called lingual papillae, which house many taste buds each. Lingual papillae come in four different types: filiform, fungiform, foliate, and vallate. Although they serve slightly different purposes, all types except for fungiform ones contain taste buds.
From an oral hygiene perspective, the issue with lingual papillae is that they create a rough texture that can harbor bacteria. When bacteria accumulate into plaque, it can cause a persistent bad taste in the mouth and leave the breath sour. Additionally, it can dull the sense of taste. This is why cleaning our tongues every day is crucial, and using a tongue scraper is the best tool for the job (as opposed to a quick scrub with a toothbrush).
You may have heard that the tongue is the strongest muscle in the body. This isn’t technically true, but the tongue does have remarkable stamina. This is because it is made up of eight different muscles working together (four intrinsic muscles that form the tongue itself and four extrinsic ones that attach to the throat and mouth), giving it many built-in redundancy systems so it can’t get tired after a workout.
It’s the tongue. For not relying on the skeleton to move, it has an amazing range of motion, able to curl, uncurl, lengthen, shorten, and sometimes even roll. We’d have trouble eating and speaking if it couldn’t do all of this.
The formation of our teeth begins as early as six weeks into fetal development. At this stage, the baby teeth start to develop, and it only takes another six weeks before the adult teeth start to form. It takes many more months for the baby teeth to finish forming under the gums and years for the adult teeth to fully develop.
Maybe you remember that when you first got your adult front teeth, their chewing surfaces were covered in little bumps. Maybe you’ve seen those bumps on your child’s new adult teeth. These are totally normal portions of a new tooth called mamelons. They possibly exist to aid the teeth in breaking through the gums. In most instances, they will naturally wear down as a result of regular chewing.
Let’s break through the fog of a few dental myths:
If you know any obscure mouth facts, we’d love to hear them. As dental health professionals, it’s our favorite topic, and we can’t wait to chat about it with you the next time we see you. Make sure you keep scheduling your regular dental exams!