What is vucle cavity?

Please refer to the  answers provided by your friends.

@Others:- Good answers, keep posting!!

  • 0

 I mean buccle

  • 0

The buccal cavity, otherwise known as the mouth, marks the beginning of the digestive system. Starting at the lips, it consists of the oral cavity, tongue, jaw, and throat. While digestion is its primary function, it also plays an equally important role in communication, through the development of sounds and speech.

The lips, which are made up of upper and lower lips, are soft and fleshy folds of skin lined with mucous membranes, that shape the opening of the buccal cavity. The skin of the lips is thinner than in other parts of the body, and does not contain hair, sweat glands, or sebaceous glands. Lips assist the intake of food as it passes into the mouth. Closed lips resemble an airtight chamber, keeping food and drink locked firmly inside, preventing spillage or leakage from the mouth. Due to their richness in nerve endings, the lips are considered a tactile organ, sensitive to touch, and cold and warm temperatures.

  • 0

The buccal cavity, otherwise known as the mouth, marks the beginning of the digestive system. Starting at the lips, it consists of the oral cavity, tongue, jaw, and throat. While digestion is its primary function, it also plays an equally important role in communication, through the development of sounds and speech.

The lips, which are made up of upper and lower lips, are soft and fleshy folds of skin lined with mucous membranes, that shape the opening of the buccal cavity. The skin of the lips is thinner than in other parts of the body, and does not contain hair, sweat glands, or sebaceous glands. Lips assist the intake of food as it passes into the mouth. Closed lips resemble an airtight chamber, keeping food and drink locked firmly inside, preventing spillage or leakage from the mouth. Due to their richness in nerve endings, the lips are considered a tactile organ, sensitive to touch, and cold and warm temperatures.

  • -1

 Oral Cavity is the entrance to your alimentary canal. Your mouth as you see it when you open wide. Postier boundry is upto the tonsils.

Buccal cavity is space between your teeth and cheeks, one on either side of the oral cavity starting from about tooth 4 when you count from the midline. 

The primary muscle in the cheek is the 'Buccinator' muscle and hence the buccal cavity.
Buccinator is one of the important muscles of the face. Helps to 'blow air out, well developed in people who play wind instruments.
Also in sucking by its inward movement, and causing a negative pressure in the mouth, helps to remove left over food in the 'buccal cavity'

  • 0
What are you looking for?