Wednesday, 1 April 2015

Do YOU have 'geographic tongue'? Physicists shed light on bizarre condition that makes the tongue look like a map


It's a gruesome condition that has long baffled scientists.
Known as geographic tongue (GT), the ailment causes people to have a mottled tongue featuring bizarre designs such as circles and what has been described as a 'map of continents'.
While no one is sure what causes it, physicists have recently discovered there are two types of GT which, combined, affect around two per cent of the population.Read more after cut,Some pics might be irritating


 

   Geographic tongue (GT) changes the tongue's upper layer of tissue, called the epithelium, which contains tastebuds.
In people with GT, some of the structures containing these buds become inflamed, according to study co-author Gabriel Seiden, a physicist at the Weizmann Institute of Science.
The condition is not contagious but can be chronic. 
The cause is unknown but scientists believe genetics may play a part. Stress, allergies, diabetes and a hormonal imbalance have also been proposed, but scientists have so far been unable to conclusively prove any of these can trigger the condition.
   While the tongue does heal itself eventually, the patterns always return and can cause some mild pain.
In the study, researchers used equations that treated GT as an 'excitable medium' through which waves of a certain state could pass through.
A forest fire is a classic example of an 'excitable medium'. 
It can spread through a forest, but it cannot return to a burnt spot until the vegetation has regrown.
'When this flame grows,' Professor Seiden told Live Science, 'it essentially destroys this layer, and continues until the whole forest is burned down,' or the entire tongue is affected.
In one version of the condition, GT starts out as a series of small spots that expand gradually in a circular pattern.

   Just as the development of forest fires can be affected by external conditions, such as the strength of the wind, the researchers say the conditions surrounding the tongue may also have important consequences for GT.
In their study, they observed a one-year-old boy who developed the characteristic lesions on multiple occasions along the tongue's edge adjacent to growing teeth.
They say this implies the constant rubbing of the tongue against the gum may trigger GT.
'Going forward, we intend to collaborate with physicians and dentists who treat GT patients to obtain valuable - and often scarce - empirical data regarding the dynamic evolution of the condition,' Dr Seiden continued.

2 comments:

  1. av got a friend with similar issue ...........still looking for a solution

    ReplyDelete
  2. Av got sumfin of such here pls what can I do

    ReplyDelete