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Teeth

Pediatrics, 2004
Common environmental chemicals, drugs, or physical agents can adversely affect human teeth during their embryonic development and after their eruption into the oral cavity. One of the more common elemental toxicants is lead. Teeth are known to accumulate lead during their development.
Ronald J, Billings   +2 more
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Submerged teeth

Journal of Clinical Pediatric Dentistry, 2002
Submersion occurs when a previously erupted tooth becomes embedded in the oral tissues. The purpose of this paper is to examine the distribution, the degree of re-impaction, the rate of congenital absence of the successor buds and the treatment in 28 submerged teeth in 17 patients.
K, Antoniades   +4 more
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Nasal teeth

The Journal of Laryngology & Otology, 1992
AbstractEctopic and supernumerary teeth occur in a wide variety of sites. Those that have been reportedinclude the mandibular condyle, coronoid process, orbit, palate, nasal cavity and the maxillaryantrum. Eruption of teeth into these sites is rare, and easily overlooked.
J P, Pracy   +2 more
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Teething

Nursing Standard, 2016
Essential facts Teething is a normal physiological process when a baby's first set of teeth emerge through the gums. Most babies grow their first tooth at some point during their first year. Babies can experience teething differently, with some showing signs of distress.
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Teeth Impaction and Structural Teeth Anomalies

Seminars in Musculoskeletal Radiology, 2020
AbstractDentists and oral and maxillofacial radiologists have used periapical, occlusal, panoramic, and cephalometric radiographs for many years for diagnosing dental anomalies, especially before orthodontic or surgical treatment. Cone beam computed tomography was developed in recent years especially for the dental and maxillofacial region. Thus it has
Danisia Haba   +3 more
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Natal Teeth

Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1986
I conducted a retrospective study based on record reviews of 50,892 infants born at the Foothills Provincial Hospital, Calgary, Alberta, Canada, from 1967 to 1984 to determine the incidence and possible causes of natal teeth. Fifteen infants were affected, for an incidence rate of one in 3,392 births. The affected teeth were the lower central incisors.
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