Abstract: | A method using polyvinylsiloxane (PVS), a high-resolution dentalimpression material, to obtain negative images of lingual surfacesis described. Epoxy-resin tongue replicas made from these impressionswere examined with scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Thismethod has been developed to visualize structural details ofthe tongue surface of living human beings and laboratory animals.The utility of the method is demonstrated with hamster tongues,which have well-defined fungiform papillae with single tastepores, and human tongues, which have more variable surface structures.Replicas made from PVS impressions of tongues of living hamsterswere compared with the same tongues after fixation. The replicascontained much of the detail present in fixed tongues. WithSEM, it was possible to identify individual fungiform papillae,which contained depressions with the size and the location ofhamster taste pores. Individual papillae could also be recognizedin human-tongue replicas, but taste pores could not be identifiedwith certainty. These replicas provide permanent, three-dimensionalrecords of tongue topography that could be used to documentchanges due to trauma, disease and aging. |