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A pear-shaped pad of tissue, behind the maxillary central incisors, that covers the incisive foramen.
To stabilize the tray while impression making
Biopsies of maxillary dysplasia requires planning and tissue stabilization. Excision lines should be parallel to the nerves and blood vessels, and caution is taken to control bleeding.
A maxillary frenectomy is where the tissue that connects your upper lip to your gums is removed. The Only time you get it removed is when there is too much tissue. Too much tissue means your lip has only so much movement. If you are getting one, don't be scared. It's a really simple procedure. I hope this helped. Good luck
The maxillary sinuses are one of 4 sets of air filled sinuses in the face. The right maxillary sinus sits to the right of your nose. Sinuses are lined with mucosal tissue and a polyp is mucosa that has overgrown into a ball like shape.
Behind your lips lie the gums.
The frenum or frenulum linguae is the band of tissue beneath the tongue. The frenulum labii superioris is the band of tissue behind your upper lip. Neither have anything to do with the gap between your central incisors, which is called diastema or gap-tooth. The gap is probably genetic in most cases.
The tissue behind and between the upper two front teeth is called the incisive papilla.
AnswerIt is called the upper labial frenulum.
tonsils
u have to give me the question but I think a specialized tissue is a special tissue used to do specific jobs in the body
The uvula is a projection from the soft palate.