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Dental Anomalies' Characteristics.

Tatiana Sella TunisOfer SarneIsrael HershkovitzTamar FinkelsteinAikaterini Maria PavlidiYehoshua ShapiraMoshe DavidovitchNir Shpack
Published in: Diagnostics (Basel, Switzerland) (2021)
The aim of this study was to characterize dental anomalies. The pretreatment records (photographs and radiographs) of 2897 patients (41.4% males and 58.6% females) were utilized to detect dental anomalies. The dental anomalies studied were related to number, size and shape, position, and eruption. A Chi-square test was carried out to detect associations between dental anomalies, jaw, and sex. A total of 1041 (36%) of the subjects manifested at least one dental anomaly. The prevalence of all dental anomalies was jaw-dependent and greater in the maxilla, except for submerged and transmigrated teeth. The most frequently missing teeth were the maxillary lateral incisor (62.3%) and the mandibular second premolars (60.6%). The most frequent supernumerary teeth were the incisors in the maxilla (97%) and the first premolars in the mandible (43%). Dental anomalies are more frequent in the maxilla and mainly involve the anterior teeth; in the mandible, however, it is the posterior teeth. These differences can be attributed to the evolutionary history of the jaws and their diverse development patterns.
Keyphrases
  • oral health
  • end stage renal disease
  • cone beam computed tomography
  • chronic kidney disease
  • gene expression
  • ejection fraction
  • drug induced
  • patient reported outcomes