Incisor Essays

  • Extinct Great Apes

    1914 Words  | 4 Pages

    Inferring Dentition and Diet in Extinct Great Apes by Looking at Extant Great Apes INTRODUCTION Knowing the diet of extant primate taxon opens up the possibility of predicting a good deal about its morphology and natural history. Morphology and natural history of extant primates is also important in making accurate inferences regarding their dentition and diet. However, when it comes to extinct primate taxon making dentition and dietary inferences are challenging and the evidence available

  • Identifying Child Abuse: A Dental Perspective

    958 Words  | 2 Pages

    her maxillary central incisors were fractured due to a previous accident on her bike. Being it was a new patient with no recorded history, the incident should be recorded and dated with as many details and findings as possible. Due to her age and the type of accident, it is a very believable story especially since this was the first visit to the office and there were no other incidents recorded. At her follow up appointment, which was 6 months later, her maxillary incisors were restored but she

  • Essay On Pediatric Dentistry

    604 Words  | 2 Pages

    hygiene at a young age, and that they learn how to take care of their teeth. Infants start getting their baby teeth around 18 months of age. However, their first tooth starts showing around 6 months the teeth that will appear first are the central incisors. Between the ages of 6 and 12 a child will start loosing their deciduous teeth and growing their adult teeth. By the time a child is of the age is 13 they will have all of their adult teeth. Children are often scared of the dentist, it can be very

  • Unilateral Posterior Crossbite Case Summary

    602 Words  | 2 Pages

    the lower face by uprighting mandibular incisors. 4. Diagnosis The patient was diagnosed as a Class III incisor relationship on a Class III skeletal pattern with unilateral posterior crossbite on left side. Total difficulty was calcified as the moderated difficulty case. 5. Treatment objectives The purposes of the treatment were to camouflage any remaining skeletal discrepancy, to establish Class I canine relationships, to upright the mandibular incisors, to create adequate overjet and overbite

  • Enamel Hypoplasia

    524 Words  | 2 Pages

    permanent incisors and the first molars. III. Molars are referred to as mulberry molars(Fig.3) and the anterior as Hutchinson’s teeth(Fig.4). Figure 3: Enamel hypoplasia of congenital syphilis (mulberry molars). The mandibular first molar shows many small globular masses of enamel on the occlusal portion of the tooth. Figure 4: Enamel Hypoplasia of congenital syphilis ( Hutchinson's incisors). There is characteristic notching of the incisal edges of the maxillary central incisors as well as

  • Koala Bear Essay

    755 Words  | 2 Pages

    koala bear will only eat the leaves of only a few eucalyptus trees and are very picky with their diet and do not like change regarding their diet. Dental formula of a koala bear: Incisors 3/1; Incisors 1/0; Pre Molars 1/1; Molars 4/4. This adds up to a total number of 30 teeth. The koala has a space between its incisors and premolars for leaves to be stored until they are ready to be processed by the premolars and molars. The molars and premolars grind the leaves until it forms a paste. This makes

  • Comparing the Digestive Systems of Animals

    1019 Words  | 3 Pages

    of plant material. They can process and extract nutrients from many plants that are otherwise indigestible from other herbivores and omnivores. A rabbit’s digestive process, as with that of a cat, begins at the mouth. The front teeth of the rabbit—incisors—slice off pieces of plant matter. The food is passed to the back teeth—molars—where mechanical digestion is incorporated and the matter is chewed into smaller particles, and then digested. The rabbit has a large stomach for its body size enabling

  • Tooth Extraction Case Study

    777 Words  | 2 Pages

    primary teeth extracted were central incisors 59.3%, while for the patients aged between (6-9) and (10-13) years the first primary molars were the most common tooth type extracted 56.4% and 59.7% respectively. Table V shows the percentage distribution of primary teeth type according to the reason of extraction. For central incisor dental caries, followed by mobility were the most common reason for extraction (31.5%) and (29.6%) respectively. For lateral incisors, dental caries was the most common

  • Why Do Babies Get Teeth

    694 Words  | 2 Pages

    months, and it’s not at all uncommon for a child to be toothless until his first birthday. There are two important things to know about teething. First, your baby’s teeth start showing up in a fairly predictable order: first the two lower central incisors, then the two top central

  • Personal Reflection: The Challenges Of Restorative Dentistry

    1155 Words  | 3 Pages

    The minority had an afternoon of troublesome, conversely, a triumphant moment for the majority. “A dentist is often called Dr. Bunot before” says Dr. Celestina Quijano, the University dentist. The stigma on the role of dentists as “Tooth Extractor” seems to be unbreakable yet the advent of technology and new discoveries regarding Restorative dentistry never fail on trying to break it. I, as an aspiring dentist, would want more to restore rather than to extract a tooth. In fact, I was not able to

  • Rat Dissection Lab Report

    612 Words  | 2 Pages

    While conducting the dissection, only four teeth were observed in the specimen, which consisted of the two incisors on the top, and two on the bottom. However, subsequent to the dissection it was noted that rats possess 16 teeth consisting of both incisors and molars (website 3, 2004). Humans possess 32 teeth that consist of 12 molars, of which four are wisdom teeth. Nowadays, several people are getting their wisdom teeth removed

  • Comparison Of Anthropoidea And New World Monkeys

    681 Words  | 2 Pages

    There are at least 145 living species of the suborder Anthropoidea . Over 90% of them are monkeys. The remaining species are apes and humans. The anthropoids (members of the suborder Anthropoidea) have been the most successful primates in populating the earth. They are generally larger, more intelligent, and have more highly developed eyes than the prosimians. There are two distinct infraorders of Anthropoidea that have been evolving independent of each other for at least 30,000,000 years. They

  • Rabbit Genetics

    746 Words  | 2 Pages

    in research. Until 1912 rabbits were classified as rodents. Scientists discovered that the two types of animals differed in several distinct anatomical ways. Rabbits, for instance, have a second pair of upper incisors, known as "peg teeth," that are found behind the two main visible incisors in the upper jaw. Rabbits have elongated hind legs adapted for moving at high speeds over open areas. Rabbits generally move in a hopping motion. They also have webbed toes to keep them from spreading as they

  • Dentition Essay

    1872 Words  | 4 Pages

    The classes of teeth developed throughout our life span are: • Incisiform (incisors) - Incisors are the pair of eight teeth directly situated in the front and center of our mouth, i.e. four in each upper and lower jaw. These single-rooted teeth are extremely important since they all have sharp edges which are used for cutting and biting food into small chewable pieces. • Caniniform (canines) - On each side of incisors in each jaw, there are four canine teeth in both primary and permanent dentitions

  • The Absorption Spectrum of Chlorophyll

    4614 Words  | 10 Pages

    The Absorption Spectrum of Chlorophyll Water + carbon dioxide → glucose + oxygen 6H2O + 6CO2 → C6H12O6 + 6O2 Absorption Spectrum An absorption spectrum shows which wavelength of light a molecule absorbs. Action Spectrum An action spectrum shows the effect of each wavelength of light on the rate of photosynthesis The absorption spectrum of chlorophyll is very similar to the action spectrum of photosynthesis. This is evidence that chlorophyll absorbs light for photosynthesis

  • Digestion Case Study

    967 Words  | 2 Pages

    consumption these glands Salivary amylase which is used to break down starch into maltose in a process known as Hydrolysis which happens throughout the whole body. Teeth are modified bones which consist of the Incisors which are used to tear off pieces of food, canines which help the incisors, molars and pre-molars grind up food into smaller pieces so they can be swallowed. Teeth are a form of mechanical digestion in which a part of the body grinds up a substance in order to digest it, this process

  • Ba Baa Black Sheep Research Paper

    748 Words  | 2 Pages

    “Ba baa Black Sheep”, it’s not everyday you hear about Sheep. They definitely aren’t the animals you find yourself thinking about everyday, but their unique characteristics are something anyone could find interesting and feel the need to know further information about. Sheep aren’t only used for their wool. They are used for many different things, but you’ll earn more knowledge about sheep as you read on. Sheep have many fascinating facts about them. Things like their memories, the different

  • Characteristics And Tebits Of Giraffes

    645 Words  | 2 Pages

    1. Food eaten- Giraffes mostly eat plants that they are able to reach such as tall trees where they eat leaves and twigs but have been known to lick dried meat off bones. 2. Dental formula and total dentition- Giraffes have no upper incisors or canines but have a long diastema between both cheeks, the dental formula is 0:0:3:3 3. Teeth shape and size- The giraffes teeth are relatively big but also blunt so that they are able to crush there food (leaves and twigs) with a lot of strength until it is

  • The Important Discovery of Kenyanthropus Platyops - The Flat Faced Man of Kenya

    900 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Important Discovery of Kenyanthropus Platyops - The Flat Faced Man of Kenya A recent finding on the western shore of Lake Turkana in northern Kenya, a semi-desert area, could hold bold new implication for the origin of man. The finding was the skull of a very early hominid which displays facial features of both modern man and early, more primitive ancestors. The findings have been dated to approximately 3.5 million years, a time period once thought to be dominated by human ancestors that

  • The Evolution of the Elephant Specie

    1064 Words  | 3 Pages

    initiated the evolution of the modern elephant specie. Although the primitive mammal is the initial... ... middle of paper ... ...cumstances led to the formation of a rather short and broad neck, in addition to the modification of the second pair of incisors of the upper jaw into ivory tusks, although the two rudimentary tusks present in the lower jaw remained diminutive. The physical adaptions adopted by the earliest elephants have led to the evolution of what is now recognised as the modern elephant