luktepitel
Luktepitel is a term used in some linguistic contexts to refer to the olfactory epithelium, the specialized sensory mucosa within the nasal cavity responsible for the sense of smell. In humans, it lines the superior part of the nasal cavity, covering the superior turbinate and the upper portion of the nasal septum, close to the cribriform plate where olfactory nerve fibers pass into the brain.
Anatomy and cells: The luktepitel is a pseudostratified columnar epithelium that contains three main cell types:
Function: The olfactory receptor neurons detect volatile odorants dissolved in the mucus. Binding of odorants to
Regeneration and clinical relevance: The luktepitel undergoes continual turnover, driven by basal cells that can proliferate
Terminology: In English-language anatomy, the standard term is olfactory epithelium; luktepitel appears in some non-English sources