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General Science => Question of the Week => Topic started by: thedoc on 02/12/2013 17:09:35

Title: QotW - 13.11.19 - Why can I squirt a jet of saliva?
Post by: thedoc on 02/12/2013 17:09:35
Hi,

In the base of my mouth, below my tongue I am sometimes able to eject a very fine spray of saliva out of my mouth. I know I am not the only person able to do that as a friend of mine could do this at will - he would lift and move his tongue and produce a fine jet of saliva that squirted from his mouth base below his tongue. The question is, is this a throwback? I assume incidentally that the gag reflex IS a throwback for food regurgitation?

Great show. Thanks. Simon
Asked by Simon Ashby


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Title: QotW - 13.11.19 - Why can I squirt a jet of saliva?
Post by: thedoc on 02/12/2013 17:09:35
We answered this question on the show...

Matt - That's very fascinating! Thanks, Chris. Finally closing the show, Hannah’s got the answer to this week’s disgusting Question of the Week...
Hannah - This week, we sleekly squirt into a question that Simon Ashby wrote in with...
Simon - In the base of my mouth below my tongue, I am sometimes able to eject a very fine spray of saliva out of my mouth. I know I'm not the only person able to do that as a friend of mine could do this at will. He would lift and move his tongue and produce a fine jet of saliva that's squirted from his mouth. The question is, why are we evolved to be able to do this?
Hannah - It’s called gleeking and it’s pretty gross, but can you do it?  If so, why do you think it happens?  To facilitate social bonding perhaps?  To find out, we speak to Professor Gordon Proctor from the Salivary Research Unit at King's College London.
Gordon -   Hello.  I've come across the occasional gleeker.  Most saliva is made and secreted by the major salivary glands.  If you lift your tongue and look in the mirror, you can see the swellings or papillae which are the ends of the tubes.  That's the ducts that take saliva from one pair of submandibular salivary glands to the mouth.  When we taste food, our salivary glands greatly increase the production and secretion of saliva.  I think that you can gleek more effectively after having tasted foods that have a strong stimulus for salivation - for example, lemon sweets.  So, gleeking is probably achieved by the compression of the ducts of the submandibular glands by muscles in the floor of the mouth when you move your tongue upwards.  It may be that in gleekers, a large volume of saliva builds up in the ducts before being expelled.
Hannah - Thanks, Gordon.  So, gleeking is possible as salivary glands have evolved to squirt saliva from the mouth.  Human saliva is 99.5% water and the rest is electrolytes, mucus, glycoproteins, enzymes, and antibacterial compounds.  These help digest and lubricate food and prevent tooth decay.  Usually, we keep it inside our mouths, but gleekers take advantage of spit to project it from their submandibular gland, out into the world.  Gross!  Now, Juliet doesn’t spit in her garden or anywhere.  She does sometimes loose her glasses there though...
Juliet - Hi.  Today in the garden, I was multi-tasking a bit too much and part of this involved putting my glasses on top of my head.  Naturally, they fell off.  I looked everywhere, but couldn’t see them even though they are bright purple and the garden is mulched in light tanned straw.  I found them close by where I had surely looked a minute before.  Why didn’t I see them the first time my eyes passed over that spot?
Hannah - So, why is it that we sometimes overlook the obvious? Why could Juliet not find her glasses?  She swears she’s not blind without them, so what happened? What do you think?
Chris - Hannah Critchlow.
Title: Re: Why can I squirt a jet of saliva?
Post by: grizelda on 09/11/2013 07:09:06
The tongue is the strongest muscle in the body. If it is exerted against a pool of saliva trapped under it, the saliva will find a way to exit post-haste.
Title: Re: Why can I squirt a jet of saliva?
Post by: RD on 09/11/2013 12:54:48
The tongue is the strongest muscle in the body. If it is exerted against a pool of saliva trapped under it, the saliva will find a way to exit post-haste.

The tongue is squirting out the contents of the salivary glands in the floor of the mouth, so squeezing a bag rather than a "pool" of saliva.

see ... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spitting#Gleeking
Title: Re: Why can I squirt a jet of saliva?
Post by: daveshorts on 12/11/2013 11:58:47
I sometimes get a similar effect when yawning, normally as I am starting to salivate - it rarely works twice. I guess because my salivary glands in the sides of my mouth get over full, and the yawning stretches and compresses them, squirting the saliva out.
Title: Re: Why can I squirt a jet of saliva?
Post by: Furneaux99 on 13/11/2013 13:53:05
At last a question of the week to which I can contribute!

For as long as I can remember I've been able to do the tongue squirt, and can do it pretty much on-demand given a sufficiently moist mouth and a few seconds to "reload".
For me, it comes from the two small nodules (saliva glands?) that sit on the membrane that joins the underside of my tongue to the floor of the mouth.
As I lift my tongue this membrane is stretched and I believe that this pulls and compresses the saliva-filled sacks and causes the squirt of liquid. A bit like sitting on a whoopee cushion.

Thanks for the show and here's to many more podcasts.

Kings.