lateral lingual swelling
During the third week there appears, immediately behind the ventral ends of the two halves of the mandibular arch, a rounded swelling named the tuberculum impar, which was described by His as undergoing enlargement to form the buccal part of the tongue. More recent researches, however, show that this part of the tongue is mainly, if not entirely, developed from a pair of lateral swellings (or distal tongue bud) which rise from the inner surface of the mandibular arch and meet in the middle line. [ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lateral_lingual_swelling ]
Term info
- Wikipedia:Lateral_lingual_swelling
- EHDAA2:0000911
- VHOG:0000731
- FMA:313628
- EMAPA:17189
Most adult amphibians have a tongue, as do all known reptiles, birds and mammals. Thus it is likely that the tongue appeared with the establishment of tetrapods and this structure seems to be related, to some extant, to the terrestrial lifestyle.[well established][VHOG]
paired
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/5c/Gray979.png
lateral swellings, lateral lingual prominence, tuberculum laterale, tuberculum linguale laterale
uberon
UBERON:0006757
lateral lingual swelling
Term relations
- anatomical entity
- embryonic structure
- develops from some pharyngeal arch 1
- part of some lingual swellings