Examples of papilla in the following topics:
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- A taste bud is a cluster of gustatory receptors (taste cells) that are located within the bumps on the tongue called papillae (singular: papilla) .
- There are several structurally-distinct papillae.
- The large circumvallate papillae contain up to 100 taste buds and form a V near the posterior margin of the tongue.
- (a) Foliate, circumvallate, and fungiform papillae are located on different regions of the tongue.
- (b) Foliate papillae are prominent protrusions on this light micrograph.
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- The tongue contains papillae, or specialized epithelial cells, which have taste buds on their surface.
- There are three types of papillae with taste buds in the human gustatory system:
- fungiform papillae, which are mushroom-shaped and located at the tip of the tongue;
- foliate papillae, which are ridges and grooves toward the back of the tongue;
- circumvallate papillae, which are circular-shaped and located in a row just in front of the end of the tongue.
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- The collecting ducts amass contents from multiple nephrons, fusing together as they enter the papillae of the renal medulla.
- Urine leaves the medullary collecting ducts through the renal papillae, emptying into the renal calyces, the renal pelvis, and finally into the bladder via the ureter.
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- Additional characteristics of amphibians include pedicellate teeth (teeth in which the root and crown are calcified, separated by a zone of noncalcified tissue) and a papilla amphibiorum and papilla basilaris (structures of the inner ear that are sensitive to frequencies below and above 10,00 hertz, respectively).
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- This is named for its fingerlike projections called papillae, that extend toward the epidermis and contain terminal networks of blood capillaries.
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- Taste buds contain the receptors for taste and are located around the small structures (papillae) on the upper surface of the tongue, soft palate, upper esophagus, and epiglottis.
- These papillae are involved in detecting the five (known) elements of taste perception: salty, sour, bitter, sweet, and umami.
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- The collecting ducts collect filtrate coming from the nephrons and fuse in the medullary papillae.
- From here, the papillae deliver the filtrate, now called urine, into the minor calyces that eventually connect to the ureters through the renal pelvis.
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- It is supplied with nutrients via blood by a structure called the hair
papilla.
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- These taste buds, located in papillae which are found across the tongue, are specific for the five modalities: salt, sweet, sour, bitter and umami.
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- The number of fungiform papillae of the tongue decline by 50% by the age of 50.