Lee D, Sims M R, Dreyer C W, Sampson W J
Department of Dentistry, University of Adelaide, South Australia.
Arch Oral Biol. 1991;36(3):211-20. doi: 10.1016/0003-9969(91)90088-c.
In the hard palate, sagittally oriented capillary loops, 8-10 microns in diameter and 70-250 microns high, extended perpendicularly from a subcapillary plexus to the connective tissue papillae. These loops formed a well-delineated vascular spine beneath the rugal crests. Capillary loop density was estimated to be 200-270/mm2 on the rugal crest, 75-160/mm2 on the rugal slopes and 70-140/mm2 in the trough. In the gingiva, the crevicular loop system was separated by a gap from the vestibular, palatal and col loop systems. Anastomoses occurred between these systems at a deeper level. The crevicular circular plexus varied from 1 to 4 vessels. Apical to the gingival margin the buccal vasculature was composed of occluso-apically orientated loops draining towards the vestibular sulcus. The capillary loops were 60-120 microns high near the gingival margin, compared with 40-60 microns near the mucogingival junction. The mucogingival margin was demarcated by a change in capillary orientation. The periodontal ligament contained mainly postcapillary-sized venules, 10-25 microns in diameter, orientated occluso-apically. Capillary loops, 50-100 microns long and directed at right angles to the root surface, occurred in the cervical third. These microvascular patterns of the marmoset are different from those of the mouse and rat.