Search results for "Human tooth development"

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The role of osteonectin in human tooth development: An immunohistological study

1992

We investigated immunohistologically 160 teeth and dental germs in various stages of tooth development taken from human individuals (13th week of pregnancy to the 24th year of life) to study the osteonectin expression in dental hard tissue. In the course of dentinogenesis, the predentin, the odontoblasts, and their cell processes show a positive osteonectin staining reaction. During cementogenesis, osteonectin is synthesized by cement-producing fibroblasts, cementoblasts, and cementocytes. The expression of osteonectin during dentinogenesis and cementogenesis is closely related to the development of the respective calcified tissue. All cells of the inner and outer enamel epithelium, the cel…

AdultPathologymedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentEndocrinology Diabetes and MetabolismDentistryStratum intermediumFetusEndocrinologystomatognathic systemAmelogenesisHuman tooth developmentmedicineHumansOsteonectinOrthopedics and Sports MedicineChildDental Cementumbiologybusiness.industryChemistryInfant NewbornInfantAmelogenesisDentinogenesisFibroblastsmusculoskeletal systemImmunohistochemistryCementogenesisstomatognathic diseasesOdontoblastChild PreschoolDentinogenesisbiology.proteinOsteonectinbusinessAmeloblastToothCalcified Tissue International
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Double talon cusps on supernumerary tooth fused to maxillary central incisor: review of literature and report of case

2014

Human tooth development is a continuous process begin at the sixth weeks in utero and extends to about sixth months after birth for the primary dentition and from sixteenth week in utero to late adolescence for permanent dentition. There is no other organ of the human body which takes so long to attain its ultimate morphology as dentition. Several physiologic growth processes participate in the progressive development of the teeth including: initiation, proliferation, histodifferentiation, morphodifferentiation, apposition, calcification, and eruption. Aberrations in different stages of tooth development can result in unique manifestations both in primary and permanent dentitions. The fact …

OrthodonticsPremaxillaDentitionbusiness.industryDentistryOdontologíaOrthodonticsReview:CIENCIAS MÉDICAS [UNESCO]medicine.diseaseCiencias de la saludstomatognathic diseasesAppositionDens invaginatusmedicine.anatomical_structurestomatognathic systemHuman tooth developmentUNESCO::CIENCIAS MÉDICASTalon cuspmedicineSupernumeraryMaxillary central incisorbusinessGeneral DentistryJournal of Clinical and Experimental Dentistry
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