Dens evaginatus in Hemophilic Patient: A Case Report

Tooth development occurs through the interaction between oral tissues during embryogenesis. Alteration through odontogenesis may cause tooth morphological alterations, one of these could be Dens evaginatus. This anatomical variation could be originated from an abnormal proliferation and folding of a...

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Autores principales: Borie E,Eduardo, Oporto V,Gonzalo, Aracena R,Daniel
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Sociedad Chilena de Anatomía 2010
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Acceso en línea:http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0717-95022010000200006
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spelling oai:scielo:S0717-950220100002000062010-10-21Dens evaginatus in Hemophilic Patient: A Case ReportBorie E,EduardoOporto V,GonzaloAracena R,Daniel Dental morphology Dens evaginatus Odontogenesis Hemophilia Tooth development occurs through the interaction between oral tissues during embryogenesis. Alteration through odontogenesis may cause tooth morphological alterations, one of these could be Dens evaginatus. This anatomical variation could be originated from an abnormal proliferation and folding of a portion of the inner enamel epithelium and subjacent ectomesenchymal cells of the dental papilla into the stellate reticulum of the enamel organ during the bell stage of tooth formation. Dens evaginatus is defined as a tubercle, or supplemental solid elevation on some portion of the crown surface. Inadequate clinical management of these teeth may result in a pulpal exposure and possible loss of vitality of the tooth. The research wants to report a case of Dens evaginatusin a permanent mandibular premolar requiring endodontic treatment.A 13-year old male patient attended the Dental Service of a local Hospital, reporting pain the lower left side of the jaw. He reported to be in medical treatment for hemophilia. During an intra oral examination, the left side in the mandible exhibited a multitubercular appearance of left premolars which suggest. Patient shows a sinus tract related to tooth 3, 4, which was sore to palpation and percussion. In radiographic analysis a radio-opacity appeared in the tubercle area of the tooth. Due to low incidence of this anomaly among the young population, it is important that Dentistry related professionals know the characteristics of this anatomical variation in order to perform an adequate clinical management of Dens evaginatus.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessSociedad Chilena de AnatomíaInternational Journal of Morphology v.28 n.2 20102010-06-01text/htmlhttp://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0717-95022010000200006en10.4067/S0717-95022010000200006
institution Scielo Chile
collection Scielo Chile
language English
topic Dental morphology
Dens evaginatus
Odontogenesis
Hemophilia
spellingShingle Dental morphology
Dens evaginatus
Odontogenesis
Hemophilia
Borie E,Eduardo
Oporto V,Gonzalo
Aracena R,Daniel
Dens evaginatus in Hemophilic Patient: A Case Report
description Tooth development occurs through the interaction between oral tissues during embryogenesis. Alteration through odontogenesis may cause tooth morphological alterations, one of these could be Dens evaginatus. This anatomical variation could be originated from an abnormal proliferation and folding of a portion of the inner enamel epithelium and subjacent ectomesenchymal cells of the dental papilla into the stellate reticulum of the enamel organ during the bell stage of tooth formation. Dens evaginatus is defined as a tubercle, or supplemental solid elevation on some portion of the crown surface. Inadequate clinical management of these teeth may result in a pulpal exposure and possible loss of vitality of the tooth. The research wants to report a case of Dens evaginatusin a permanent mandibular premolar requiring endodontic treatment.A 13-year old male patient attended the Dental Service of a local Hospital, reporting pain the lower left side of the jaw. He reported to be in medical treatment for hemophilia. During an intra oral examination, the left side in the mandible exhibited a multitubercular appearance of left premolars which suggest. Patient shows a sinus tract related to tooth 3, 4, which was sore to palpation and percussion. In radiographic analysis a radio-opacity appeared in the tubercle area of the tooth. Due to low incidence of this anomaly among the young population, it is important that Dentistry related professionals know the characteristics of this anatomical variation in order to perform an adequate clinical management of Dens evaginatus.
author Borie E,Eduardo
Oporto V,Gonzalo
Aracena R,Daniel
author_facet Borie E,Eduardo
Oporto V,Gonzalo
Aracena R,Daniel
author_sort Borie E,Eduardo
title Dens evaginatus in Hemophilic Patient: A Case Report
title_short Dens evaginatus in Hemophilic Patient: A Case Report
title_full Dens evaginatus in Hemophilic Patient: A Case Report
title_fullStr Dens evaginatus in Hemophilic Patient: A Case Report
title_full_unstemmed Dens evaginatus in Hemophilic Patient: A Case Report
title_sort dens evaginatus in hemophilic patient: a case report
publisher Sociedad Chilena de Anatomía
publishDate 2010
url http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0717-95022010000200006
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AT aracenardaniel densevaginatusinhemophilicpatientacasereport
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