Results 161 to 170 of about 43,187 (187)
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A mechanism of noncontinuous supraosseous tooth eruption

American Journal of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics, 2001
Numerous theories have been propounded to explain the various aspects of tooth eruption, but no general consensus exists about some of the underlying mechanisms that govern these aspects. An important unresolved issue is the source of the motive forces that displace teeth.
Thomas R. Katona, Haihong Qian
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MicroRNA control of tooth formation and eruption

Archives of Oral Biology, 2017
Tooth development involves epithelium invagination, mesenchyme aggregation, and epithelium-mesenchyme communication. A sophisticated signaling pathway network regulates the differentiation and crosstalk of multiple cell types in tooth germs and coordinates the broad spectrum of complex processes.
Zhihe Zhao   +4 more
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Tooth Eruption and Common Disturbances

2021
As a child transitions from the primary into the permanent dentition, the general dental practitioner is well placed to spot aberrations in development and eruption. Appropriate clinical and radiographic examination and early referral can simplify or reduce the need for complicated orthodontic treatment, leading to improved aesthetics and well-being of
Cheryl Somani   +2 more
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Disturbed Tooth Eruption

2013
Tooth eruption comprises the movement of teeth through the soft tissues of the jaw and the overlying mucosa into the oral cavity. The involved biological processes are not yet entirely elucidated, but the importance of the dental follicle and its role in initiating eruption by regulating alveolar bone resorption and alveolar bone formation has been ...
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The pattern and control of eruptive tooth movements

American Journal of Orthodontics, 1985
Assumptions about eruptive tooth movements based on experience with adolescents may not be applicable to all ages. The eruptive process can be subdivided into six phases--three profunctional stages of individual tooth eruption (follicular growth, pre-emergent eruptive spurt, and postemergent eruptive spurt) and three postfunctional stages of the ...
J.Richard Steedle, William R. Proffit
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Continuous recording of tooth eruption in the rabbit

Archives of Oral Biology, 1972
Abstract A variable capacitance displacement transducer was used to obtain a continuous record of the eruption of a rabbit's incisor. Provided that the tooth was only minimally disturbed during fixation of the recording system, eruption continued at a nearly constant rate of between 10 and 37 μm/hr.
B.K.B. Berkovitz, B. Matthews
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Evaluating Tooth Eruption on Sealant Efficacy

The Journal of the American Dental Association, 1990
For patients aged 5 to 9 and 11 to 14, 100 occlusal surfaces on newly erupting permanent molars were treated with a self-curing pit and fissure sealant. All teeth were categorized according to stage of eruption and sealant thickness of the coating applied. After 36 months, 75 surfaces were examined for a final evaluation; 52 surfaces (70%) did not need
Joseph B. Dennison   +2 more
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Inhibition of Tooth Eruption in the Rat by a Bisphosphonate

Journal of Dental Research, 1998
Studies of osteopetrotic rodents suggest that localized alveolar bone resorption must occur if the tooth is to To test this hypothesis directly, we injected postnatal rats with pamidronate, a bisphosphonate that reduces bone resorption by osteoclasts, The results of these experiments demonstrate that this bisphosphonate inhibits the time of tooth of ...
R.L. Grier, Gary E. Wise
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The Basic and Applied Biology of Tooth Eruption

Connective Tissue Research, 1995
The dentition and the alveolar process of each jaw develop simultaneously so that, by the time the crown is completed and eruption begins, the crown is enclosed in a crypt within alveolar bone. Thus, the eruption of a tooth to its functional position involves discretely localized, bilaterally symmetrical bone resorption to produce an eruption pathway ...
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Inverse tooth eruption

Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology, 1990
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