Conditions Associated With A Fissured Tongue

Fissured tongue is the name of a generally harmless condition where multiple grooves mark the surface of the tongue. The condition is normally painless and thus patients may not notice it until a routine dental exam or annual physical. There are several common patterns of grooves. The most common is a central groove down the length of the tongue with smaller grooves radiating outward. These grooves may be up to six millimeters deep. There is no treatment for a fissured tongue, though a dentist may suggest tongue-brushing to remove food particles from deeper fissures. While the origins of fissured tongues are unclear, it is associated with various other health conditions. Learn about them now.

Down Syndrome

Photo Credit: The Villager

Down syndrome is the name for a set of conditions and physical features that are the result of an extra copy of chromosome 21 in the patient’s genetic code. A cell division error in early development leads to forty-seven chromosomes instead of the normal forty-six. This genetic abnormality impacts both the patient’s mental and physical development. Along with an enlarged tongue and a smaller palette, fissured tongue is a common feature in individuals with this syndrome, with about eighty percent of children with Down syndrome having this condition. These oral features, along with a decrease in mental development, can make speaking difficult for patients with the syndrome.

Benign-Migratory Glossitis

Photo Credit: Dreamstime

Benign-migratory glossitis is an oral condition where the tongue looks spotted in appearance due to patches of missing papillae on its surface. The condition is also known as geographic tongue as some think the patchy appearance of the tongue with this condition looks like a map. Like fissured tongue, the origins of benign-migratory glossitis are not entirely understood. Geographic tongue is painless, though patients with the condition may be less tolerant of spicy foods as well as having other issues with their sense of taste. Benign-migratory glossitis and fissured tongue often appear together, though their relationship is unclear. Both conditions seem to have a genetic component as they run in families.

NEXT PAGE
NEXT PAGE

MORE FROM HealthPrep

    MORE FROM HealthPrep

      OpenAI Playground 2025-05-13 at 10.55.45.png

      MORE FROM HealthPrep