Lingual tonsils

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Lingual tonsils
Illu04 tongue.jpg
Tongue
Latin tonsilla lingualis
Gray's subject #243 1138

The lingual tonsils are rounded masses of lymphatic tissue that cover the posterior region of the tongue.

They are located on the dorsal surface at the base of the tongue. Their lymphatic tissue are dense and nodular, their surface is covered with stratified squamous epithelium which invaginates as a single crypt into each lingual tonsil. They are partially surrounded by connective tissue placing them in the group of Partially Encapsulated Lymphatic Organs, tonsils, the only one of its kind. They have associated mucous glands which are drained by ducts directly into the single tonsillar crypt.

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This article was originally based on an entry from a public domain edition of Gray's Anatomy. As such, some of the information contained within it may be outdated.

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At the very back of the tongue.
The lingual tonsils, in company with the pharyngeal and palatine tonsils, constitute Waldyer's tonsillar ring and function as an immunological organ
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