The tongue manipulates food while chewing and swallowing, dilates the airwa
y during inspiration, and shapes the sounds of speech in humans. While perf
orming these functions the tongue morphs through many complex shapes. At pr
esent it is not known how the muscles of the tongue perform these complex s
hape changes. The difficulty in understanding tongue biomechanics is partly
due to gaps in our knowledge regarding the complex neuromuscular anatomy o
f the tongue. In this study the motor and sensory nerve anatomy of four can
ine tongues was studied with Sihler's stain, a technique that renders most
of the tongue tissue translucent while counterstaining nerves. An additiona
l tongue specimen was serially sectioned to provide a reference for the mus
cle structure of the tongue.
The hypoglossal nerve (XII) has approximately 50 primary nerve branches tha
t innervate all intrinsic and extrinsic tongue muscles. Two extrinsic muscl
es, the styloglossus and hyoglossus, are innervated by about three to four
branches from the lateral division of the XII. The third extrinsic muscle,
the genioglossus, is composed of oblique and horizontal compartments, which
receive about ten nerve branches from the medial division of the XII. The
intrinsic muscles are composed of many neuromuscular compartments. On each
side, the superior longitudinal muscle had an average of 40 distinct muscle
fascicles that spanned the length of the tongue. Each of the fascicles is
supplied by a nerve branch. The inferior longitudinal muscle had a similar
organization. Each of the transverse and vertical muscles is composed of ov
er 140 separate muscle sheets, and every sheet is innervated by a separate
terminal nerve. The muscle sheets from the vertical and transverse alternat
e their orientation 90 degrees throughout the length of the tongue.
It is concluded that the intrinsic canine tongue muscles are actually compo
sed of groups of neuromuscular compartments that are arranged in parallel (
longitudinal muscles) or in a precise alternating sequence (transverse and
vertical muscles). This arrangement suggests that the compartments from the
different tongue muscles could cooperate to control the three-dimensional
contractile state of their local area. This hypothesis could explain how ma
ny different tongue shapes are formed, and is supported by physiologic evid
ence. Anat Rec 256:412-424, 1999. (C) 1999 Wiley-Liss, Inc.