The human buccal cavity is a long time home for numerous microorganisms, ranging from the microbiota bacteria ( staphylococcus aureus, streptococcus spp., Haemophilus influenza) to the pathogenic stains of both bacteria, fungi, archae and so on.
The organisms that reside in the mouth are in abundance of every nutrients they might. But they are unstable because of the washing down effect of most mechanical object consume by humans including water. Since most of them cannot survive in the high acidity of the stomach, they have devices a way of clinging fast to the mouth cheek, crowns, enamel, gums below the tongue and very near to the throat.
The easiest sight to take for study is the cheek cell, scrap the cheek with either a tooth pick, sharp object or a cotton swap, smear the object having the organisms on the glass slide, add a little water and cover with a cover glass.
The picture you see under the microscope is a little intriguing, the cells below are cheek cell with all sorts of microbes swimming through it, most are the attached mouth microbes
Greatest inoculist!!!
Incubate
No comments:
Post a Comment