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Submandibular Gland & Wharton's Duct Anatomy

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I'd like to use this case to show the anatomy of the

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submandibular gland, and also to introduce

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you to Wharton's duct.

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So we are looking at a CT scan of the neck,

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which is performed with 2.5 mm thick sections.

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And we're going to go inferiorly because this

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patient had discomfort in the left floor of the mouth.

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So as we go down,

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we're obviously having issues with the

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dental amalgam artifact.

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However, when we get down to the mandibular level,

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we're actually free of that artifact.

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Now there is anatomy here that

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I want to point out to you.

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This is the midline of the tongue,

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and just to the other side of the midline

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fatty septum of the tongue,

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one finds the genioglossus muscles.

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These are the largest of the extrinsic

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muscles of the tongue.

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There is another curving

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muscle here that you can see on both sides.

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So this is a muscle that you can see faintly here.

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This is our genioglossus muscles.

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Here and here.

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And there is this other muscle,

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which as you can see,

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curves just a little bit here.

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And this is the hyoglossus muscle.

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Remember in our talk on the oral cavity and oral pharynx,

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that you have this muscle that intertwines

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with the styloglossus muscle and we call it the

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styloglossus hyoglossus muscle complex.

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Just lateral to the

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styloglossus muscle, you see intermediate

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low signal intensity tissue.

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That intermediate low signal intensity tissue is the

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sublingual space with the sublingual

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gland in the floor of the mouth.

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Lateral to that,

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we come upon a very important muscle, and this is

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the muscle known as the mylohyoid muscle.

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It's the muscle portion of the floor of the mouth,

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the other portion being the sublingual gland.

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However,

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within this sublingual space

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in the floor of the mouth,

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the other thing that passes is Wharton's duct.

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Wharton's duct

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inserts at the...

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in the floor of the mouth.

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If you lift up your tongue and look in the floor of

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the mouth on either side of the midline frenulum,

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you will find Wharton's duct orifice.

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This patient has a calcification in the

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proximal portion of Wharton's duct.

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Wharton's duct is the duct of

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the submandibular gland.

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So where indeed is the submandibular gland?

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So let's continue to scroll downward.

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And you can see now that we have

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tissue around this huge calcification,

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which represents the residual submandibular gland.

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Here's the submandibular gland on the left.

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Here's the non atrophic,

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it's still kind of small,

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but right submandibular gland.

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This portion of the submandibular gland,

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which is below the mylohyoid muscle

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is considered the superficial portion

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of the submandibular gland.

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And you'll notice that there has been some fatty

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infiltration or atrophy of the left submandibular

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gland by virtue of this huge calcification

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which coursed into

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Wharton's duct.

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As I mentioned,

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there is a portion of submandibular tissue

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which may course posterior to the mylohyoid muscle.

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You can just see on the left...

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on the right side that there's

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just this little bit of tissue.

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Let me use my pen.

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So let's say that this is our mylohyoid

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muscle ending right here.

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And here you have

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submandibular tissue.

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So that portion which courses just medial to

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and above the mylohyoid muscle,

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would be the deep portion of the submandibular gland.

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So it's really dominated by the superficial portion.

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But you can see just a little bit of that tissue

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here, posterior to the posterior border

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of that mylohyoid muscle.

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I want to make another anatomic point

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which is important, just for the sake of the

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anatomy and the pathology.

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So I have been referring to Wharton's duct.

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Wharton's duct is the duct of

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the submandibular gland.

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Do not confuse that with a tumor that

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is exclusive to the parotid gland,

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which is known as Warthin's

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tumor.

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This is not found in the submandibular gland.

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It is a parotid gland, benign tumor.

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So be careful of the wording here.

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The other point I just wanted to make was the

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close proximity that you see between the

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submandibular glandular tissue and the parotid

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glandular tissue. So down here,

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at the angle of the mandible,

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we're at the tail of the parotid gland and

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it comes very close, as you can see,

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to the submandibular tissue.

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There are occasions where you'll have masses that

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might bridge between the two and you question

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which gland is it primarily associated with.

Report

Description

Faculty

David M Yousem, MD, MBA

Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean

Johns Hopkins University

Tags

Salivary Glands

Neuroradiology

Metabolic

Head and Neck

CT

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