Saturday, February 13, 2010

Purple Bumps Back Of Tongue Blue - Purple Spots On Tongue?

Blue - Purple spots on tongue? - purple bumps back of tongue

Help discolored tongue!?
Hello, my friend, 4 blue-purple patches on the tongue. Are symmetrical and 2 are located on both sides of the tongue. There seems nothing wrong with his tongue. Even a small mouth and teeth on the tongue has a remainder lot. However, she says, never noticed the discoloration until a year ago. He also holds the key to 6 years old and had no servant. There are no bumps or sores in or out of the mouth. It also affirms the discolored areas feel a bit numb, and he knows less about the place. What could that be??

I feel like the teeth of the pressure on the mouth, but why should note these points a year ago, then?

* He did not have the molarsnot been eliminated.
12 minutes ago

I mean, his wisdom teeth!

2 comments:

:) said...

Smoking may
is what do you smoke?
otherwise I would only to check to make sure

good luck: D

Dana \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ u0026lt; 333

redraven... said...

You should see your PCP right away to the doctor if everything is blue, which means "cyanosis."

Here define
Cyanosis is a bluish discoloration of the skin and mucous membranes by the presence of> 5 g / dl of deoxygenated hemoglobin in blood vessels near the skin surface.

Although human blood is always a shade of red (except in rare cases of illnesses linked hemoglobin), which distorts the optical properties of the skin of dark red blood without oxygen to appear in blue [1].

The basic principle is that the cyanosis hemoglobin without oxygen are more susceptible to blue light, and also produces vasoconstriction, which makes it even clearer. The dispersion of the color that is produced, the blue veins and cyanosis similarARL for the process reflects the blue sky: Some colors are broken and absorbed more than others. During the cyanosis, the substances are very low in oxygen, and thus tissue, which normally fills with oxygenated blood is bright in a dark, full of blood without oxygen. Darker blood more prone to blue-and visual effects [2], and thus a lack of oxygen - hypoxia - leads to a bluish color of lips and other mucous membranes.

The name derives from the color cyan, kyanous, which comes from the Greek word for blue.
Consult a physician to reach significance.

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