Results 231 to 240 of about 127,214 (299)
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Dental Bleaching, Microabrasion, and Resin Infiltration: Case Report of Minimally Invasive Treatment of Enamel Hypoplasia.

International Journal of Prosthodontics, 2020
Enamel hypoplasia occurs because of a defect in formation of the organic matrix during the development of tooth enamel. Minimally invasive procedures of the slightly altered enamel contribute to a greater longevity of teeth and prevent them from ...
A. Oliveira   +4 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Enamel Hypoplasia – A Clinical Review

Dental Journal of Indira Gandhi Institute of Medical Sciences, 2023
As a result of congenital and developmental systemic diseases, errors in the growing enamel organ result in enamel abnormalities such as enamel hypoplasia or opacities. The great occurrence of these flaws shows how susceptible teeth are to alterations in the prenatal and postnatal environment.
Rashmi Rokade   +5 more
openaire   +1 more source

The incidence of enamel hypoplasia in children between 8 and 15 years in Anbar Governorate, Iraq

Journal of International Oral Health, 2019
Aims: Hereditary and environmental factors can lead to enamel hypoplasia (EH). This defect can affect the baby teeth (primary) or permanent teeth. The study has been performed to estimate the incidence of the enamel hypoplasia among children between the ...
A. Warwar   +2 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Infantile hemangioma of the upper lip and enamel hypoplasia: Two case reports

Pediatric dermatology, 2019
Segmental infantile hemangiomas related to PHACE syndrome have recently been associated with enamel hypoplasia. We present two cases of solitary, localized upper lip infantile hemangioma with enamel hypoplasia of deciduous teeth.
G. Ochando-Ibernón, J. M. Azaña-Defez
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Hereditary enamel hypoplasia

Clinical Genetics, 1971
An extensive family with a total of forty–one individuals who are either affected or reputed to be affected with hereditary hypoplasia of the enamel is presented. The distribution of patients, which spans four generations in this pedigree, appears to be consistent with X–linked dominant inheritance of the disorder.
openaire   +2 more sources

Pitted enamel hypoplasia in tuberous sclerosis

Clinical Genetics, 1992
Thirty patients with tuberous sclerosis (from 29 different families) were examined for evidence of macroscopically visible pitted enamel hypoplasia. Of 23 patients with permanent teeth, 11 (48%) showed multiple enamel pits (mean 4.6 pits, range 3–9), but none were seen in six patients with deciduous teeth.
J R, Sampson   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Early hominid enamel hypoplasia

American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 1978
AbstractEnamel hypoplasia in the South African Plio‐Pleistocene fossil hominid sample is examined. The Swartkrans hominids are shown to have a higher incidence of hypoplasia than the Sterkfontein hominids. Within the Swartkrans sample, individuals with hypoplasia of the first upper molar have lower‐than‐expected ages of death.
openaire   +2 more sources

Experimental Enamel Hypoplasia

Nature, 1950
IN a previous paper1, a method was described of producing enamel hypoplasia in the rat's incisor tooth by stopping matrix formation by the tall ameloblasts. This method consisted in essentials of first causing healing of low-phosphorus rickets and then suddenly stopping healing by re-imposing the rachitic condition.
openaire   +1 more source

Dental Enamel Hypoplasias in Prehistoric Populations

Advances in Dental Research, 1989
Recent years have witnessed an impressive increase in research on enamel hypoplasias in archaeological populations. By reviewing a series of studies of enamel hypoplasias at Dickson Mounds, Illinois, North America (950-1300 A.D.), a prehistoric site involved in the transition from gathering-hunting to agriculture, this paper provides an illustration ...
openaire   +2 more sources

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