Results 321 to 330 of about 126,744 (340)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
2005
Publisher Summary Teeth are formed deep within the jaws and then erupt through the gum tissue once nearly complete. Unlike the changing shapes of other skeletal elements, tooth crown morphology can only be altered by attrition (tooth wear), breakage, or demineralization once the crown erupts.
Pieter A. Folkens, Tim D. White
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Publisher Summary Teeth are formed deep within the jaws and then erupt through the gum tissue once nearly complete. Unlike the changing shapes of other skeletal elements, tooth crown morphology can only be altered by attrition (tooth wear), breakage, or demineralization once the crown erupts.
Pieter A. Folkens, Tim D. White
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Journal of Computer Assisted Tomography, 2002
The anatomy of the teeth and surrounding bony structures is easily illustrated by computed CT image protocols, which produce detailed surface renderings of this complex area. The purpose of this article is to label the dental and bony landmarks of the maxilla, mandible, and palatine bones together with the adjacent relevant muscular and neurovascular ...
G Duncan +3 more
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The anatomy of the teeth and surrounding bony structures is easily illustrated by computed CT image protocols, which produce detailed surface renderings of this complex area. The purpose of this article is to label the dental and bony landmarks of the maxilla, mandible, and palatine bones together with the adjacent relevant muscular and neurovascular ...
G Duncan +3 more
openaire +3 more sources
2009
Dental caries is a process that typically keeps recurring throughout life, and the consequences are too often seen as irreversible damage to the dentition. At various stages of life, different parts of the dentition are affected, and the effects continue to be seen in the dentition long after the events took place.
H. Eggertsson, A. Ferreira-Zandona
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Dental caries is a process that typically keeps recurring throughout life, and the consequences are too often seen as irreversible damage to the dentition. At various stages of life, different parts of the dentition are affected, and the effects continue to be seen in the dentition long after the events took place.
H. Eggertsson, A. Ferreira-Zandona
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Rehabilitation of the worn dentition*
Journal of Oral Rehabilitation, 2008Summary  The purpose of this review was to evaluate the literature on the rehabilitation of tooth wear, with some pertinent historical, epidemiological and aetiological aspects of tooth wear provided as background information. In historical skull material, extensive tooth wear, assumed to be the result of coarser diets, was found even in relatively ...
Gunnar E. Carlsson +3 more
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Journal of Dental Research, 1972
The dentition of Papio anubis was studied in 50 male and female animals; gross observation, study casts, radiographs, and histologic preparations were used. An overall general similarity to the dentition of human beings was observed in size, morphology, and occlusion.
Paul Virgadamo +3 more
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The dentition of Papio anubis was studied in 50 male and female animals; gross observation, study casts, radiographs, and histologic preparations were used. An overall general similarity to the dentition of human beings was observed in size, morphology, and occlusion.
Paul Virgadamo +3 more
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1984
The evaluation of the formation or the emergence of a single tooth can be a valuable indicator for clinical diagnosis and treatmen planning, but the evaluation of the whole dentition either by calcification stages or emergence or both, is a unique way for the determination of dental maturity as a system, similar to the skeletal system.
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The evaluation of the formation or the emergence of a single tooth can be a valuable indicator for clinical diagnosis and treatmen planning, but the evaluation of the whole dentition either by calcification stages or emergence or both, is a unique way for the determination of dental maturity as a system, similar to the skeletal system.
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The restoration of the mutilated dentition
Journal of Dentistry, 1985Abstract This paper is concerned with providing clinical solutions to many of the problems involved with restoring the mutilated dentition. Planning the restorations involves considering all the patient's needs and must take into account physical fitness and the alertness of the individual concerned. The design of transitional prostheses is important
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Geological Society of America Bulletin, 1925
Introduction The artiodactyls are a group of hoofed mammals set off from the others primarily by the tendency to reduce the foot to the third and fourth digits. The earlier forms may have four toes, occasionally a trace of the fifth, but in all cases the weight falls between the third and fourth digits, so that they are equally developed, and there is
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Introduction The artiodactyls are a group of hoofed mammals set off from the others primarily by the tendency to reduce the foot to the third and fourth digits. The earlier forms may have four toes, occasionally a trace of the fifth, but in all cases the weight falls between the third and fourth digits, so that they are equally developed, and there is
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The dentition of Lindow man [PDF]
D H Goose, R C Connolly
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