66 results on '"mandibular canal"'
Search Results
2. Diagnostic value of routine dental radiographs for predicting the mandibular canal localization validated by cone‐beam computed tomogram measurements
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Bernhard Wiechens, Phillipp Brockmeyer, Tayhan Sevinc, Georg Hoene, Henning Schliephake, and Wolfram Hahn
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cephalometry ,cone‐beam computed tomography ,mandibular canal ,radiography ,dental ,Dentistry ,RK1-715 - Abstract
Abstract Objectives To test the hypothesis that routine dental radiographs can be used to draw conclusions regarding the mandibular canal (MC) localization. Material and Methods A total of 108 radiographs (36 orthopantomograms [OPTs], 36 lateral cephalograms [LCs], and 36 cone‐beam computed tomograms [CBCTs]) of 36 patients were analyzed. Statistical analysis included all cephalometric parameters obtained by OPTs, LCs, and CBCTs. Potential influencing parameters were calculated using linear and logistic regression with a backward removal algorithm. For predictability of MC localization, parameters were correlated using Pearson's correlation. Results The MC ran along the lingual half (n = 24) twice as often as in the buccal half (n = 12) in the population studied. The position was always symmetrical contralaterally. No sex‐specific influence was observed (p = .34). Lingual and buccal MC courses were statistically significantly correlated to increased and decreased jaw angles (LC/OPT), respectively (p = .003; r = −.48/p = .010; r = −.42). An increased jaw angle was significantly correlated with a more cranial MC position (p = .013; r = −.41); a deep and distal bite position was significantly correlated with a caudal and buccal MC position (p = .004; r = −.47/p = .001; r = .57). Moreover, an increase of 1 point in the Hasund score predicted an increased probability of a buccal MC position by 18.6%. The jaw angle analyzed in OPT and LC images were positively correlated (r = .89, p
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- 2022
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3. Age‐related radiomorphometric changes on panoramic radiographs
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Yeon‐Hee Lee, Q‐Schick Auh, Yang‐Hyun Chun, and Jung‐Sub An
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age estimation ,first molar ,mandibular canal ,mental foramen ,panoramic radiograph ,pulp‐to‐tooth ratio ,Dentistry ,RK1-715 - Abstract
Abstract Objectives We aimed to analyse age‐related anatomical changes in teeth and mandibular structures using panoramic radiographs. Materials and Methods We included 471 subjects aged 13–70 years (mean, 35.12 ± 18.72 years). Panoramic radiographs were used to record intraoral condition and radiomorphometric parameters. After grouping the subjects by age decade, descriptive statistics and analysis of variance were performed to assess age‐related patterns. Results The number of missing teeth, endodontically treated teeth, full veneer crowns, and implant prosthesis increased with age (all p
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- 2021
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4. Mandibular canal versus inferior alveolar canal: A Delphi study
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Joe Iwanaga, Thomas R. Gest, Soichiro Ibaragi, Jun Ichi Asaumi, R. Shane Tubbs, Keith Horner, and Yohei Takeshita
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Histology ,Delphi Technique ,Delphi method ,Mandibular canal ,Dentistry ,Mandible ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Terminology as Topic ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Inferior alveolar canal ,0303 health sciences ,business.industry ,Terminologia Anatomica ,Mandibular foramen ,030206 dentistry ,General Medicine ,Neurovascular bundle ,stomatognathic diseases ,Plastic surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030301 anatomy & morphology ,Anatomical terminology ,Anatomy ,business - Abstract
Introduction The general principles of anatomical terminology indicate that the "mandibular canal" should be named the "inferior alveolar canal" as it accommodates the inferior alveolar neurovascular bundles. Therefore, we performed a Delphi study to evaluate the current understanding and use of the terminology in different geographical regions and areas of expertise and to determine the appropriate terminology for this bony canal. Methods A Delphi panel was formed and questions sent and answered via email about: field of expertise (anatomy, oral surgery/oral and maxillofacial (OMF) surgery, oral radiology/OMF radiology, plastic surgery, ENT surgery, or dentistry with the exception of oral/OMF surgery and oral/OMF radiology), years of experience in the field of expertise, country currently working in, "what is the name of the bony canal that contains the inferior alveolar neurovascular bundle," and "what should the structure above be called, in general?" Results A total of 52 participants responded to the questionnaire. Half or more of the experts in anatomy, oral/OMF surgery, and ENT/Plastic surgery considered "mandibular canal" to be the most appropriate name for this bony canal. In contrast, more than half of all experts in oral/OMF radiology and dentistry, i.e., most fields of dentistry, considered "either mandibular canal or inferior alveolar canal" to be the appropriate name. Conclusions The results of the Delphi study and general principles suggest that an alternative term for the "mandibular canal" should be "inferior alveolar canal." This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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- 2021
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5. Age‐related radiomorphometric changes on panoramic radiographs
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Q-Schick Auh, Jung-Sub An, Yang-Hyun Chun, and Yeon-Hee Lee
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Molar ,Panoramic radiograph ,Mandibular canal ,Mandible ,mental foramen ,Mandibular first molar ,Mental foramen ,stomatognathic system ,first molar ,Radiography, Panoramic ,Maxilla ,medicine ,Humans ,General Dentistry ,Dental alveolus ,Orthodontics ,Periodontitis ,business.industry ,Maxillary canine ,RK1-715 ,Original Articles ,medicine.disease ,age estimation ,Mandibular Canal ,stomatognathic diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Dentistry ,pulp‐to‐tooth ratio ,panoramic radiograph ,Original Article ,business - Abstract
Objectives We aimed to analyse age‐related anatomical changes in teeth and mandibular structures using panoramic radiographs. Materials and Methods We included 471 subjects aged 13–70 years (mean, 35.12 ± 18.72 years). Panoramic radiographs were used to record intraoral condition and radiomorphometric parameters. After grouping the subjects by age decade, descriptive statistics and analysis of variance were performed to assess age‐related patterns. Results The number of missing teeth, endodontically treated teeth, full veneer crowns, and implant prosthesis increased with age (all p
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- 2020
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6. Interstitial fluid drainage from rat apical area takes place via vessels in the mandibular canal
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Anca Virtej, Helge Wiig, Olav Tenstad, and Ellen Berggreen
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0206 medical engineering ,Mandibular canal ,Mandible ,02 engineering and technology ,Mandibular first molar ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Tooth Apex ,stomatognathic system ,Interstitial fluid ,Apical area ,Foramen ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Rats, Wistar ,General Dentistry ,Chemistry ,Extracellular Fluid ,030206 dentistry ,Anatomy ,Molar ,020601 biomedical engineering ,Rats ,stomatognathic diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Lymphatic system ,Cervical lymph nodes ,Drainage ,Female ,Lymph ,Dental Pulp Cavity - Abstract
We sought to investigate the transport route for protein‐rich fluid from the apical area towards the draining lymph nodes. The first mandibular molar root canals in 24 female Wistar rats were instrumented and filled with radioactive‐labelled human serum albumin. The rats were sacrificed at different intervals beginning after 10 min (time 0) and continuing up to 72 h. Three jaw segments, gingiva around the first molar, blood samples, submandibular and cervical lymph nodes were collected and analyzed for radioactivity. The starting volume of tracer (control) for all experiments was calculated from measurements at time 0. At time 0, radioactivity was only detected in the jaw segments. Within lymph nodes and serum, the tracer was found after 4 h, with the highest amount recorded in serum up to 24 h. Lymphatics were found within the mandibular canal along blood vessels and nerves and exiting via foramen mandibularis, after immunohistochemical staining in four untreated rats. Our results show tracer distribution from the apical area towards the mandibular canal in a posterior direction. The tracer washout rate was low, and the fluid was mainly absorbed into blood vessels. The lymphatics in the mandibular canal may be more important for immune cell transport than for fluid drainage. publishedVersion
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- 2020
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7. Variation in accessory mental foramen frequency and number in extant hominoids
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Chris Robinson and Caitlin B. Yoakum
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Histology ,Mandibular canal ,Lower face ,Mental Foramen ,Mandible ,Biology ,Mandibular surface ,Mental foramen ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,stomatognathic system ,Extant taxon ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,fungi ,Hominidae ,Anatomy ,Cone-Beam Computed Tomography ,musculoskeletal system ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Nerves providing sensation to the lower face and jaw exit the mandibular canal via the mental foramen. In humans, there are many documented occurrences of additional foramina (accessory mental foramina, AMFs) on the lateral mandibular surface that may also contain nervous structures. There are large discrepancies in the literature regarding how often AMFs occur in humans, and investigations of non-human hominoid AMFs are rare. Consequently, the causes of interspecific diversity in this variable have not been explored. This project seeks to compare the frequency and number of AMFs between males and females, and among human regional groups and hominoid subspecies and species, and to investigate possible causal factors for any differences identified. No significant differences were found between males and females in any group. Gorillas and orangutans had the highest percentages of individuals with AMFs and the highest mean number of foramina, while modern humans and siamangs had the lowest figures for these variables. Significant differences (p < .05) were found for the mean number of foramina between most pairs of species. The results also showed that species with mandibles that are larger overall, have a larger area anterior to mental foramen, and a longer mandibular canal typically present more AMFs. The strongest correlation was found between the mean number of mental foramina and mandibular canal length. We suggest that these results provide preliminary support for the hypothesis that increasing mandibular canal length increases the likelihood that that nerves will ramify, leading to greater frequencies of accessory mental foramina.
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- 2019
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8. Radiographic prediction of mandibular third molar eruption and mandibular canal involvement based on angulation
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Martine Van Vlierberghe, Reinhilde Jacobs, Annelie Miclotte, Myrthel Vranckx, Wim Coucke, Bieke Grommen, Constantinus Politis, Anna Ockerman, and Elke Claerhout
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Molar ,Adolescent ,Radiography ,Mandibular canal ,Orthodontics ,Mandible ,Tooth Eruption ,Mandibular third molar ,Mandibular second molar ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,stomatognathic system ,Radiography, Panoramic ,Humans ,Medicine ,Longitudinal Studies ,030212 general & internal medicine ,business.industry ,Impaction ,Tooth, Impacted ,030206 dentistry ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Molar, Third ,Surgery ,Oral Surgery ,business - Abstract
The aim of our study was to identify and predict patients at risk of impeded mandibular third molar eruption and potential relation between the third molar roots and the mandibular canal, based on molar angulations in an early development stage.A total of 1011 adolescent orthodontic patients were included in this longitudinal study.We analysed pre-eruptive rotational changes and root development of mandibular third molars on 2022 panoramic radiographs (two time-points). Five variables were evaluated: third molar eruption level, development stage, risk of relation between the third molar and the mandibular canal, the molar angulations and orthodontic treatment. The relation between early third molar angulation and mean annual angulation change was assessed using a linear mixed model. Logistic regression was applied to investigate a potential correlation of the radiographic variables with the eruption potential and risk of developing a relation between the third molar and the mandibular canal.Mandibular third molar follicles with an initial angulation exceeding 27.0° relative to the second molar tend to progressively increase their angulation during further development. A significant correlation was found between the hemimandibular molar angulations and the probability of eruption (P 0.0001). The second to first molar angulation was predictive for potential development of a relation with the mandibular canal (P = 0.005).From the present data, it appears that severely angulated mandibular third molars (27.0°) have a minimal chance of future eruption and a maximal risk of developing a relation with the mandibular canal.
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- 2019
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9. Diagnostic value of routine dental radiographs for predicting the mandibular canal localization validated by cone-beam computed tomogram measurements.
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Wiechens B, Brockmeyer P, Sevinc T, Hoene G, Schliephake H, and Hahn W
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- Humans, Mandibular Canal, Radiography, Panoramic, Patient Care Planning, Mandible diagnostic imaging, Cone-Beam Computed Tomography methods
- Abstract
Objectives: To test the hypothesis that routine dental radiographs can be used to draw conclusions regarding the mandibular canal (MC) localization. MATERIAL AND METHODS: A total of 108 radiographs (36 orthopantomograms [OPTs], 36 lateral cephalograms [LCs], and 36 cone-beam computed tomograms [CBCTs]) of 36 patients were analyzed. Statistical analysis included all cephalometric parameters obtained by OPTs, LCs, and CBCTs. Potential influencing parameters were calculated using linear and logistic regression with a backward removal algorithm. For predictability of MC localization, parameters were correlated using Pearson's correlation., Results: The MC ran along the lingual half (n = 24) twice as often as in the buccal half (n = 12) in the population studied. The position was always symmetrical contralaterally. No sex-specific influence was observed (p = .34). Lingual and buccal MC courses were statistically significantly correlated to increased and decreased jaw angles (LC/OPT), respectively (p = .003; r = -.48/p = .010; r = -.42). An increased jaw angle was significantly correlated with a more cranial MC position (p = .013; r = -.41); a deep and distal bite position was significantly correlated with a caudal and buccal MC position (p = .004; r = -.47/p = .001; r = .57). Moreover, an increase of 1 point in the Hasund score predicted an increased probability of a buccal MC position by 18.6%. The jaw angle analyzed in OPT and LC images were positively correlated (r = .89, p < .001)., Conclusions: Routine dental radiographs provide informative guidance on the location of the MC in the vertical and transverse levels. This finding could be used in the initial consultation and treatment planning to consider more invasive diagnostic methods further down the line., (© 2022 The Authors. Clinical and Experimental Dental Research published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2022
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10. A cone-beam computed tomography study of the anatomical relationships between mandibular teeth and the mandibular canal, with a review of the current literature
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Seçil Aksoy, Umut Aksoy, and Kaan Orhan
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Adult ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Molar ,Cone beam computed tomography ,Histology ,Adolescent ,Mandibular Nerve ,Group ii ,Mandibular canal ,Mandible ,Inferior alveolar nerve ,Age and sex ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Sex Factors ,0302 clinical medicine ,stomatognathic system ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Premolar ,Humans ,Bicuspid ,Tooth Root ,Instrumentation ,Aged ,Orthodontics ,business.industry ,Mandibular teeth ,Age Factors ,030206 dentistry ,Cone-Beam Computed Tomography ,Middle Aged ,stomatognathic diseases ,Medical Laboratory Technology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,030101 anatomy & morphology ,Anatomy ,business - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to evaluate age- and sex-related changes in the anatomical relationships between the roots of the molars and premolars and the mandibular canal using cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) images. A total of 243 patients (116 males, 127 females) aged 16-83 years for whom previous CBCT scans were available were enrolled in this study. The patients were subcategorized by sex and age (Group I,21 years; Group II, 21-40 years; and Group III,40 years). The distances between the mandibular canal and the molars and premolars were measured. The mandibular canal was significantly closer to the root apices of the second and third molars than to the apices of other evaluated teeth (p 0.05). All measurements were significantly higher in male than in female subjects (p 0.05). Group I subjects exhibited significantly shorter distances between the mandibular canal and root apices of the first and second premolars, and the molars, than those of Group II and III subjects (p 0.05). Direct contact relationships were found in 1.6%, 3.3%, 3.3%, 16%, and 32.2% of teeth (running from the first premolar to the third molar, respectively). Age and sex influenced the anatomical relationships between mandibular teeth and the mandibular canal, and these should be considered when planning endodontic and surgical procedures to avoid potential nerve injury.
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- 2017
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11. Investigation into intraoral approach for nerve block injection at the mental foramen in the horse
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R. E. Eckert, Noah D. Cohen, S. Marx, and C. E. Griffin
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040301 veterinary sciences ,Equine ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,0402 animal and dairy science ,Tuohy needle ,Mandibular canal ,Dentistry ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Mental nerve ,0403 veterinary science ,Mental foramen ,stomatognathic diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,stomatognathic system ,Cheek teeth ,Occlusion ,medicine ,Premolar ,Nerve block ,business - Abstract
Summary Invasive dental procedures performed in the standing, sedated horse are facilitated by local and regional anaesthesia. The traditional transcutaneous approach to the mental foramen is used to desensitise the incisive region including the mandibular incisors, but is not well tolerated by many sedated patients. In this study, a new, intraoral needle insertion technique for nerve block at the mental foramen was investigated. In 15 equine cadaver heads and two live horses, computed tomography (CT) was used to verify Tuohy needle placement into each mental foramen using an intraoral technique. Varying volumes of contrast medium (3, 6, 10 mL) were injected into the mandibular canal with and without digital occlusion of the mental foramen. The distance of retrograde flow was measured. Additionally, measurements were taken to determine the position of the mental foramen within the interdental space. Correct placement of Tuohy needles and injection of contrast medium into the mandibular canal using an intraoral approach at the mental foramen was achieved in all injections. Retrograde flow of contrast medium was accomplished with all volumes, regardless of occlusion. Although not statistically significant, the 10 mL group appeared to have a greater distance of flow. The needle insertion technique described here appears to be a potential alternative to traditional transcutaneous approaches to mental nerve block for procedures involving the incisive region. In addition, it was found that 79% of the mandibular canals injected with 10 mL of contrast medium had retrograde flow to the position of PM4, suggesting this method may be a useful alternative technique for nerve block for the more rostrally located cheek teeth. The location of the mental foramen was consistently found in the distal third of the interdental space (approximately 60–80% of the distance between the distal aspect of the lateral corner incisor and the mesial aspect of the second premolar).
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- 2017
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12. Complicated untreated apical periodontitis causing paraesthesia: A case report
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José F. Siqueira, Simona Loghin, and Domenico Ricucci
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Periodontitis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Dentistry ,Mandibular canal ,030206 dentistry ,medicine.disease ,Asymptomatic ,Chin ,Surgery ,Lesion ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,stomatognathic system ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,business ,Abscess ,General Dentistry ,Endodontic retreatment ,Mandibular molar - Abstract
The purpose of this article was to report a case of untreated apical periodontitis resulting in severe late complications. A patient with an asymptomatic crowned root canal-treated mandibular molar revealing a radiographic substandard endodontic treatment and a slight periapical radiolucency was made aware of the treatment options and opted for no treatment. The lesion slightly increased in size after 6 years, but the tooth remained asymptomatic and endodontic retreatment was again refused. After 4 more years, the patient presented with an abscess and severe pain, complicated by paraesthesia of the left chin and lip. Radiographic examination revealed that the lesion had increased considerably to involve the mandibular canal. The treatment protocol included long-term intracanal medication with calcium hydroxide and follow-ups revealed complete resolution of the periapical radiolucency and the paraesthesia had completely subsided.
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- 2017
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13. A Novel Method for Observation of the Mandibular Foramen: Application to a Better Understanding of Dental Anatomy
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Jingo Kusukawa, Koichi Watanabe, Yoko Tabira, Koh-Ichi Yamaki, Joe Iwanaga, Christian Fisahn, Yasuhiko Kamura, Shogo Kikuta, Tsuyoshi Saga, R. Shane Tubbs, and Kengo Tanaka
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0301 basic medicine ,Histology ,Dental anatomy ,Mandibular canal ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,stomatognathic system ,Cadaver ,Medicine ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Orthodontics ,biology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Mandible ,Mylohyoid groove ,Mandibular foramen ,030206 dentistry ,biology.organism_classification ,Lingula ,Endoscopy ,stomatognathic diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030101 anatomy & morphology ,Anatomy ,business ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Cone-beam computed tomography gives us much useful morphological information about the mandibular bone. Many studies of the mandible include findings from this technique. However, there have been no endoscopic studies of the mandible. Sixteen sides of eight dry mandibles resected from cadavers (age range 38-83 years) were examined by endoscopy. The head of the endoscope was 2.0 mm in diameter. We examined the mandibular foramen, lingula, mylohyoid groove, and mandibular canal. The mylohyoid grooves showed variations such as double grooves and canals. The mandibular lingula was located superior or medial to the the mandibular foramen. In a single case, the medial wall inside the mandibular canal showed a porous surface. The retromolar canal was observed in three sides. None of the images in the present study have been seen in other studies. Observation of the retromolar canal from the mandibular canal in particular can help dental students as well as oral and maxillofacial surgeons to understand its morphology. Anat Rec, 2017. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Anat Rec, 300:1875-1880, 2017. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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- 2017
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14. A prevalence study of bifid mandibular canals using cone beam computed tomography
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James R Allison and Andrew Carr
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0301 basic medicine ,Orthodontics ,Molar ,Cone beam computed tomography ,education.field_of_study ,Sensory disturbance ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Population ,Mandibular canal ,Dentistry ,030206 dentistry ,Inferior alveolar nerve ,Implant placement ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Dental extraction ,medicine ,Surgery ,sense organs ,030101 anatomy & morphology ,Oral Surgery ,business ,education - Abstract
Aim This study aims to assess the prevalence of bifid mandibular canals in a UK population using cone beam computed tomography. Materials and Methods This is a prevalence study of 140 patients (280 sides) referred to a dental hospital in the UK for extraction of a third molar. Canals were classified from cone beam computed tomography images using a novel classification. Results At least one bifid canal was seen in 30.00% (n = 42/140) of patients (95% CI: 26.13–33.87%) and in 18.93% (n = 53/280) of sides (95% CI: 16.59–21.27%). The retromolar canal was the most common variant observed. Conclusions The bifid mandibular canal appears to be a common anatomical variant, of which clinicians should be aware. These variants are relevant to surgery in the retromolar region, dental extraction and implant placement, where damage has the potential to cause bleeding and sensory disturbance.
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- 2017
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15. The neurovascular contents of a unilateral double mandibular canal: A case study
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Kristen R Ramirez
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medicine.anatomical_structure ,business.industry ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,Genetics ,Medicine ,Mandibular canal ,sense organs ,Anatomy ,business ,Neurovascular bundle ,Molecular Biology ,Biochemistry ,Biotechnology - Abstract
The occurrence of bifid mandibular canals is unusual but not rare. Previous reviews and case studies have described numerous types of bifid canals based on location, anatomy, and contents. Developm...
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- 2019
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16. Prognostic and staging implications of mandibular canal invasion in lower gingival squamous cell carcinoma
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Tadaaki Kirita, Takahiro Kamata, Masaya Okura, Michihiro Ueda, Tomonao Aikawa, Yoshihide Ota, Nobuhiro Yamakawa, Mitsunobu Otsuru, Takumi Hasegawa, Takahide Komori, Hiroshi Kurita, Masahiro Umeda, Tetsuro Yamashita, and Souichi Yanamoto
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Male ,squamous cell carcinoma ,Oncology ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Medullary cavity ,Biopsy ,overall survival ,TNM staging ,Mandibular canal ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,Mandible ,03 medical and health sciences ,Bone invasion ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Cox proportional hazards regression ,Overall survival ,Humans ,Medicine ,Neoplasm Invasiveness ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,Aged ,Neoplasm Staging ,Original Research ,Aged, 80 and over ,Gingival Neoplasms ,business.industry ,Head and neck cancer ,Clinical Cancer Research ,Cancer ,Middle Aged ,oral cancer ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Combined Modality Therapy ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Carcinoma, Squamous Cell ,Female ,head and neck cancer ,Cortical bone ,business ,Lower Gingival Squamous Cell Carcinoma - Abstract
A multi‐institutional study was undertaken to determine whether mandibular canal (MC) invasion and mandibular medullary bone invasion are independent factors in lower gingival squamous cell carcinoma (SCC). A total of 345 patients with lower gingival SCC were retrospectively reviewed. Mandibular bone invasion was categorized into three types; no bone invasion; invasion through cortical bone (medullary); and MC invasion. The overall survival rate and factors affecting local, regional, and distant failures were assessed by Cox proportional hazards regression analysis and Kaplan–Meier estimates. Bone invasion was present in 201 (58%) patients, of whom 107 (31%) had medullary invasion and 94 (27%) had MC invasion. Using the International Union Against Cancer (UICC) staging system and American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) system, 171 (50%) patients were classified as T4a. When the bone invasion criteria were excluded from the UICC/AJCC system definition, 152 T4a tumors were downstaged and reclassified to T1 in 12 (3%), to T2 in 98 (28%), and to T3 in 42 (12%). In Cox multivariate analysis, MC invasion was an independent predictor of overall survival but medullary bone invasion was not. Medullary bone invasion was an independent variable for distant control. The current T staging system has restricted prognostic utility. The authors recommend a modified T staging system, whereby tumors with MC invasion instead of medullary bone invasion are classified as T4a, and tumors are first classified as T1 to T3 based on size and then upstaged by one T classification in the presence of medullary invasion.
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- 2016
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17. MR neurographic orthopantomogram: Ultrashort echo-time imaging of mandibular bone and teeth complemented with high-resolution morphological and functional MR neurography
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Wei Liu, Avneesh Chhabra, Felix P. Kuhn, Evelyn Dappa, Daniel Nanz, Gustav Andreisek, Andreas Boss, David Grodzki, Michael Ho, and Andrei Manoliu
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Panoramic radiograph ,business.industry ,Magnetic resonance neurography ,Radiography ,Mandible ,Mandibular canal ,030206 dentistry ,Anatomy ,Inferior alveolar nerve ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Fractional anisotropy ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,business ,Nuclear medicine ,Image resolution - Abstract
Purpose Panoramical radiographs or cone-beam computed tomography (CT) are the standard-of-care in dental imaging to assess teeth, mandible, and mandibular canal pathologies, but do not allow assessment of the inferior alveolar nerve itself nor of its branches. We propose a new technique for “MR neurographic orthopantomograms” exploiting ultrashort echo-time (UTE) imaging of bone and teeth complemented with high-resolution morphological and functional MR neurography. Materials and Methods The Institutional Review Board approved the study in 10 healthy volunteers. Imaging of the subjects mandibles at 3.0T (Magnetom Skyra, Siemens-Healthcare) using a 64-channel head coil with isotropic spatial resolution for subsequent multiplanar reformatting, was performed. Bone images were acquired using a 3D PETRA sequence (TE, 0.07 msec). Morphological nerve imaging was performed using a dedicated 3D PSIF and 3D SPACE STIR sequence. Functional MR neurography was accomplished using a new accelerated diffusion-tensor-imaging (DTI) prototype sequence (2D SMS-accelerated RESOLVE). Qualitative and quantitative image analysis was performed and descriptive statistics are provided. Results Image acquisition and subsequent postprocessing into the MR neurographic orthopantomogram by overlay of morphological and functional images were feasible in all 10 volunteers without artifacts. All mandibular bones and mandibular nerves were assessable and considered normal. Fiber tractography with quantitative evaluation of physiological diffusion properties of mandibular nerves yielded the following mean ± SD values: fractional anisotropy, 0.43 ± 0.07; mean diffusivity (mm2/s), 0.0014 ± 0.0002; axial diffusivity, 0.0020 ± 0.0002, and radial diffusivity, 0.0011 ± 0.0001. Conclusion The proposed technique of MR neurographic orthopantomogram exploiting UTE imaging complemented with high-resolution morphological and functional MR neurography was feasible and allowed comprehensive assessment of osseous texture and neural microarchitecture in a single examination. J. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2016;44:393–400.
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- 2016
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18. Insight of Dogs' Inner Mandible Anatomy using Mathematical Models
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L. M. Carreira and M. Santos
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Male ,040301 veterinary sciences ,Radiography ,Mandibular canal ,Dentistry ,Mandible ,0403 veterinary science ,03 medical and health sciences ,Dogs ,0302 clinical medicine ,Alveolar ridge ,medicine ,Animals ,General Veterinary ,business.industry ,Skull ,030206 dentistry ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,Models, Theoretical ,Surgery, Oral ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Standard error ,Female ,business ,Canine tooth ,Gingival margin - Abstract
This study was performed in a sample of 20 dogs (n = 20) and aimed to: (1) characterize the mandible height (Mh), mandibular canal height (MCh) and distance between the inter-dental alveolar margin and the mandibular canal (dIAM-MC) dimensions, and (2) to develop mathematical models that express the insight's mandible anatomy of those important mandible structural elements allowing the prediction of their dimensions using physical parameters such as patient body weight (Wg) and the canine tooth width at the free gingival margin level-(wCGM). Lateral-view X-rays of both sides of the skull were taken for all the individuals. Three mathematical prediction models were developed to calculate Mh, MCh and dIAM-MC. Achieved proportions of the mandible considered parameters regarding its height were of 36.45% for MCh, 50.90% for dMAI-MC and 12.65% for vMC. Statistically significant differences were registered between the Wg and wCGM (P = 0.00), Mh (P = 0.00), MCh (P = 0.00) and dIAM-MC (P = 0.00). Only the Wg presented a strong correlation with the wCGM (R = 0.58), Mh (R = 0.70), dIAM-MC (R = 0.60) and MCh (R = 0.68). These models will allow a clinician to estimate the size of the mandible structures by only using data obtained during the physiological examination, with a sufficiently high prediction capacity and a very low standard error. The study points out the relationships of physiological parameters such as Wg and wCGM with mandible anatomical structural elements considered as important in oral surgery. The results of this study give the surgeon a new additional tool providing more information on the mandible anatomical structures and its relationships. This reduces the risk of iatrogenic lesions during the oral surgical procedures and improves patient safety.
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- 2016
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19. Haemorrhage following coronectomy of an impacted third molar associated with a bifid mandibular canal: a case report and review of the literature
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A. Mohindra, M. Evans, and C. Verea Linares
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Molar ,Orthodontics ,business.industry ,Dentistry ,Mandibular canal ,030206 dentistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Medicine ,Surgery ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Oral Surgery ,business - Published
- 2016
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20. Intraoperative Measurement of the Distance from the Bottom of Osteotomy to the Mandibular Canal Using a Novel Ultrasonic Device
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Eli E. Machtei, Hadar Zigdon-Giladi, Michael Saminsky, and Rina Elimelech
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Orthodontics ,Cone beam computed tomography ,Panoramic radiograph ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Radiography ,Ultrasound ,Mandibular canal ,Dentistry ,030206 dentistry ,Osteotomy ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,medicine ,Osteotome ,Oral Surgery ,Dental implant ,business ,General Dentistry - Abstract
Background In our previous study, we found that a novel ultrasound (US) device may serve as a useful intraoperative tool to measure the distance from osteotomy to the inferior alveolar canal (IAC). Purpose To validate our previous results in a larger group of osteotomies in the posterior mandible. Methods During dental implant placement surgery, osteotomies were created using a standardized 2-mm-diameter pilot drill. The distance from the bottom of the osteotome to the IAC was assessed using an ultrasonic device and compared with a standard panoramic radiograph used to measure the same residual distance. The total distance from the crestal bone to the IAC was measured on a preoperative computed tomography (CT) and compared with total US measurements by summing the drill depth with residual depth measurements. Results Mean radiographic and US residual distances were 5.19 ± 1.95 mm, 5.01 ± 1.82 mm, p = 0.79 respectively. These measurements presented strong positive correlations (r = 0.61, p = .01). Mean total CT distance was 13.48 ± 2.66 mm; mean total US calculation was 13.69 ± 2.51 mm. No significant difference was found (p > .05). Conclusions The results support our previous pilot study and confirm that the tested US device identifies the IAC and measures the distance from the osteotomy to the roof of the mandibular canal.
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- 2015
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21. Mandibular canal, foramina of the mandible and their variations: part II: the clinical relevance of the preoperative radiographic evaluation and report of five cases
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A.N. Eliades, Ch. Papadeli, and Anastasios Tsirlis
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0301 basic medicine ,Radiography ,Mandibular canal ,Inferior alveolar nerve ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,stomatognathic system ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,Foramen ,Medicine ,Orthodontics ,business.industry ,Mandible ,030206 dentistry ,Anatomy ,Nerve injury ,musculoskeletal system ,Neurovascular bundle ,stomatognathic diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Surgery ,sense organs ,030101 anatomy & morphology ,Oral Surgery ,medicine.symptom ,Cadaveric spasm ,business - Abstract
Aims In part I of the article, a detailed description of the anatomical variations of the mandibular canal and the foramina of the mandible was given. The aim of part II is to discuss the clinical relevance of the anatomical variations. Materials and methods A literature review was carried out, and five cases of mandibular canal variations are reported. Results Anatomical variations of the mandibular canal and foramina of the mandible are reported in bibliography. Bifid and double mandibular canals have been firstly reported in 1973. Since then, the anatomical variations of the mandibular canal have been described by case reports, cadaveric and retrospective radiological studies. It has been proved that the inferior alveolar nerve gives communication fibers to other nerves and extraosseous branches, before entering the mandibular canal, whereas even if it enters the mandible, it branches during its course into the canal. Also, the supplementary innervation of mandibular teeth and periodontal tissues by the long buccal and mylohyoid nerves has been suggested. Several authors also reported the existence of retromolar foramen and supplementary buccal and lingual foramina and their important role either in vascularisation or innervation. Conclusions The neurovascular contents of the mandibular canals and foramina gain more importance in oral surgery and implantology because these components are vulnerable to damage during implant placement and sagittal split osteotomy surgery, and complications may occur during the surgery (i.e. unsuspected bleeding, nerve injury). Also, clinicians should be aware of accessory foramina or canals of the mandible in understanding failed inferior alveolar nerve block.
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- 2015
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22. Age-related radiomorphometric changes on panoramic radiographs.
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Lee YH, Auh QS, Chun YH, and An JS
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- Humans, Mandible diagnostic imaging, Mandibular Canal, Maxilla, Molar, Radiography, Panoramic
- Abstract
Objectives: We aimed to analyse age-related anatomical changes in teeth and mandibular structures using panoramic radiographs., Materials and Methods: We included 471 subjects aged 13-70 years (mean, 35.12 ± 18.72 years). Panoramic radiographs were used to record intraoral condition and radiomorphometric parameters. After grouping the subjects by age decade, descriptive statistics and analysis of variance were performed to assess age-related patterns., Results: The number of missing teeth, endodontically treated teeth, full veneer crowns, and implant prosthesis increased with age (all p < .05). The prevalence of periodontitis significantly increased after the 40s and was the highest in the 60s (57.1%). The maxillary canine root was the longest in the 10s and 20s (p < .001). With age, the mandibular canal and mental foramen moved towards the alveolar bone crest, on the opposite side of the mandibular inferior border. The pulp area and pulp-to-tooth ratio of maxillary/mandibular first molars were significantly higher in the 10s and 20s than in other age groups (all p < .05)., Conclusions: We provided comprehensive information on age-related anatomical changes in teeth and mandibular structures based on panoramic radiographs. Various radiographic parameters showed specific changes with increasing age. Assessing these age-related changes can be useful in determining an individual's age, and may aid in medico-legal and forensic judgments., (© 2020 The Authors. Clinical and Experimental Dental Research published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2021
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23. Spatial relationship between the mental foramen and mandibular developing teeth in modern humans, chimpanzees, and hamadryas baboons
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Hitoshi Fukase
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biology ,Mandibular canal ,Context (language use) ,Anatomy ,biology.organism_classification ,Mental foramen ,stomatognathic diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,stomatognathic system ,Anthropology ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Deciduous teeth ,Spatial relationship ,Hamadryas baboon ,Developing Teeth - Abstract
The mental foramen (MF) of adult human mandibles is characterized by its high position and posterosuperior opening orientation, compared with that of nonhuman primates. In this study, to examine when and how such interspecies variations in MF position/orientation are manifested in the context of dental development, positional relationships between the MF and nearby forming teeth (dc, dm1, C, P3) were assessed using CT-scanned growth-series mandibles of the following three species with various MF positions and anterior dental sizes: modern humans, chimpanzees, and hamadryas baboons. Results showed that modern humans have more antero-superiorly located MF and dc than the two nonhuman samples during growth, whereas the MF and dm1 of hamadryas baboons are the most inferiorly positioned. Considering that the mandibular canal generally reaches the dc/dm1 position during infancy, the species differences in MF position can be attributed largely to the positions where the anterior deciduous teeth first appear. Specifically, the distinctive dental position of modern humans should stem eventually from the comparatively small anterior dental size. Furthermore, human MF position shifted slightly upwards with alveolar development, unlike in the nonhuman samples, accompanied by strong curvature and vertical elongation of the anterior mandibular canal. Meanwhile, the human MF shifted from a forward to a lateral/backward orientation in association with human-specific growth-related alveolar recession. The findings of this study, thus, collectively indicate that taxonomic variations in adult MF position/orientation can be interpreted partly by the positions of the surrounding developing teeth.
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- 2014
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24. Clinical study on survival rate of short implants placed in the posterior mandibular region: resonance frequency analysis
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Reinhard Gruber, Thallita Pereira Queiroz, Rogério Margonar, Ana Paula de Souza Faloni, Eloá Rodrigues Luvizuto, and Samuel Carlos Aguiar
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Adult ,Male ,Time Factors ,Dentistry ,Mandibular canal ,Clinical study ,Humans ,Jaw, Edentulous ,Medicine ,610 Medicine & health ,Survival rate ,Aged ,Dental Implants ,business.industry ,Dental Implantation, Endosseous ,Mandible ,Mandibular region ,Middle Aged ,Short implants ,Resonance frequency analysis ,Treatment Outcome ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Mechanical stability ,Female ,Oral Surgery ,business - Abstract
OBJECTIVE Short implants are increasingly used, but there is doubt about their performance being similar to that of regular implants. The aim of this study was to compare the mechanical stability of short implants vs. regular implants placed in the edentulous posterior mandible. MATERIAL AND METHODS Twenty-three patients received a total of 48 short implants (5 × 5.5 mm and 5 × 7 mm) and 42 regular implants (4 × 10 mm and 4 × 11.5 mm) in the posterior mandible. Patients who received short implants had
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- 2014
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25. Comparative development and evolution of two lateral line phenotypes in lake malawi cichlids
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Jacqueline F. Webb, Lauren Carter, Nathan C. Bird, and Juleen Dickson
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biology ,Lateral line ,Mandible ,Mandibular canal ,Anatomy ,Labeotropheus fuelleborni ,biology.organism_classification ,Skull ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,sense organs ,Line (text file) ,Aulonocara baenschi ,Heterochrony ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
A comparison of the pattern and timing of development of cranial lateral line canals and canal neuromasts in three species of Lake Malawi cichlids, Labeotropheus fuelleborni and Metriaclima zebra (narrow lateral line canals), and Aulonocara baenschi (widened lateral line canals) was used to test the hypothesis that the evolution of widened canals (thought to be an adaptive phenotype in the lateral line system) from narrow canals is the result of heterochrony. Using histological analysis and scanning electron microscopy, this study has provided the first detailed and quantitative description of the development of widened lateral line canals in a teleost, and has demonstrated that: 1) canal neuromast number and the pattern of canal morphogenesis are conserved among species with different adult canal phenotypes, 2) heterochrony ("dissociated heterochrony" in particular) can explain the evolution of widened canals and variation in morphology between canals within a species with respect to canal diameter and neuromast size, and 3) the morphology of the lateral line canals and the dermal bones in which they are found (e.g., the mandibular canal the dentary and anguloarticular bones of the mandible) can evolve independently of each other, thus requiring the addition of another level of complexity to discussions of modularity and integration in the skull of bony fishes.
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- 2014
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26. Correlation between panoramic radiographic signs and high-risk anatomical factors for impacted mandibular third molars
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R. Joshi, Tomohiro Okano, Kazuyuki Araki, S.B. Vasudeva, Nana Harada, Yukiko Matsuda, and Kenji Seki
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Molar ,Orthodontics ,Cone beam computed tomography ,Panoramic radiograph ,business.industry ,Impacted tooth ,Radiography ,Dentistry ,Mandibular canal ,Cortical plate ,White line ,stomatognathic diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,stomatognathic system ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,Medicine ,Surgery ,sense organs ,Oral Surgery ,business - Abstract
Aim To determine the relationship between radiographic signs on panoramic radiographs and anatomic features of thinning of the cortical plates and closeness of the root of the third molar to the mandibular canal on cone beam computed tomography images (CBCT). Methods Panoramic images were analysed for the relationship of the root of the third molar to the mandibular canal. The CBCT images were analysed for the relation between mandibular canal and the third molar root. The results were tabulated, and Chi square test (P
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- 2013
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27. Bifid mandibular canals and the factors associated with their presence: a medical computed tomography evaluation in a Taiwanese population
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Earl Fu, Hsiao-Pei Tu, E-Chin Shen, Michelle Peng, Cheng-Yang Chiang, and Yaoh-Shiang Lin
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Population ,Taiwan ,Mandibular canal ,Computed tomography ,Mandible ,Computed tomographic ,Multidetector Computed Tomography ,Humans ,Medicine ,education ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,education.field_of_study ,Long axis ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Anatomy ,Middle Aged ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,sense organs ,Oral Surgery ,business - Abstract
Objectives To examine distribution of bifid mandibular canals in a Taiwanese population and to evaluate factors contributing to the phenomenon. Material and methods Computed tomographic images from 173 subjects (97 females and 76 males) were obtained using a 64-slice multidetector computerized tomography system, and the presence of bifid mandibular canals, as well as their widths and lengths, was examined. Association of length of bifid canals with possible contributing factors, including gender, age, and side of presentation, as well as size of cross-sectional bony area of mandible along the long axis of mandibular canal, was evaluated. Results Bifid mandibular canals, with mean values of 10.1 and 0.9 mm in length and width, were found in 53 (30.6%) of 173 patients and 64 (18.5%) of 346 hemi-mandibles. Bifid canals appeared more frequently and tend to penetrate mandible with greater lengths in males if compared with those in females. When males were compared with females and when mandibles with bifid canals were compared with ones without, the former tend to present with larger bony area at corresponding levels of cross-sectional plane than the later, respectively. By regression analysis, significant association was found between length of bifid canals and gender, side of hemi-mandible, and bony area at mid-zone of mandibular canal. Conclusions Bifid canals were observed in 30.6% of subjects and 18.5% of hemi-mandibles. Significant association between length of bifid canals and gender, side of hemi-mandible, and cross-sectional bony area of mandible was observed.
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- 2012
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28. The Effect of Removable Partial Dentures on Alveolar Bone Resorption: A Retrospective Study with Cone-Beam Computed Tomography
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Burak Bilecenoğlu, Oguz Ozan, Bayram Ufuk Sakul, Kaan Orhan, Seçil Aksoy, and Murat İçen
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Orthodontics ,Cone beam computed tomography ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Mandible ,Mandibular canal ,Dentistry ,Bone resorption ,Resorption ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,stomatognathic system ,medicine ,Dentures ,business ,General Dentistry ,Dental alveolus ,Removable partial denture - Abstract
Purpose: The aim of this study was to compare vertical and horizontal mandibular alveolar bone resorption by measuring bone morphological variation in Kennedy Class II removable partial denture (RPD) wearers and non-wearers using cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT). Materials and Methods: In total, 124 sites in the CBCT scans of 62 (29 RPD non-wearers, 33 RPD wearers) Kennedy Class II patients were analyzed retrospectively. Three-dimensional representations of the mandible with superimposed cross-sectional slices were developed with the CBCT scans to evaluate the mandibular alveolar height and width by measuring distances between the mandibular canal, mylohyoid ridge, alveolar crest, and lower border of the mandible in four regions (eight sites) of Kennedy Class II non-wearers and wearers of RPDs. Results: Mandibular alveolar bone height and width were significantly lower in edentulous sites when compared with dentate sites in both Kennedy Class II non-wearers and wearers of RPDs (p < 0.05). Additionally, mean vertical and horizontal mandibular bone resorption was significantly higher in RPD wearers than in non-wearers (p < 0.05). Conclusions: Vertical and horizontal alveolar bone resorption was found to be higher in the RPD wearing patients when comparing the dentate and edentulous sites.
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- 2012
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29. Position of the mental foramen on panoramic radiographs and its relation to the horizontal course of the mandibular canal: a computed tomographic analysis
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Young-Jun Lim, Myung-Joo Kim, Jung-Hoon Pyun, Jin Kim, and Sug-Joon Ahn
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Adult ,Male ,Cephalometry ,Mandibular Nerve ,Radiography ,Mandibular canal ,Dentistry ,Mandible ,Inferior alveolar nerve ,Mandibular first molar ,Mental foramen ,Mandibular second molar ,Young Adult ,Tooth Apex ,stomatognathic system ,Radiography, Panoramic ,medicine ,Premolar ,Humans ,Bicuspid ,X-Ray Intensifying Screens ,Aged ,Orthodontics ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,Molar ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Coronal plane ,Female ,Oral Surgery ,business ,Tomography, Spiral Computed - Abstract
Aim The purposes of this study were (1) to investigate the bucco-lingual course of the mandibular canal in the bony structure and (2) to figure out the relationship between the position of mental foramen on panoramic radiographs and the horizontal course of the mandibular canal. Materials and methods A database of panoramic radiography and spiral computed tomography (CT) scans was searched and 100 subjects were selected based on the criteria. Mental foramina were classified into four groups according to its antero-posterior position. Three measurements were made on each slice of coronal CT scans at three different points: (1) apex of second premolar; (2) median point of two root apexes of first molar; and (3) median point of two root apexes of second molar. The bucco-lingual ratios were calculated to access the relative bucco-lingual position of the mandibular canal. Results The distribution of subjects according to the type of mental foramen was: (1) type 3, 67%; (2) type 2, 26%; (3) type 4, 5%; and (4) type 1, 2%. The overall horizontal course of the mandibular canal was relatively constant from the second molar to first molar, whereas much significant directional change was found on the remaining course. Between types 2 and 3, no statistically significant differences were found at the level of the second molar and first molar (P = 0.461 and 0.965, respectively). Only below the second premolar, significant differences were found (P = 0.001). Conclusions Based on the findings of our computed tomographic image analysis, the position of mental foramen on panoramic radiographs was affected by its horizontal course of inferior alveolar nerve. The significant horizontal direction change of the course was found after the canal passing below the mandibular first molar regardless of the antero-posterior position of mental foramen.
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- 2012
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30. Inferior alveolar nerve injury associated with implant surgery
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Hom-Lay Wang, Gintautas Pranas Sabalys, Pablo Galindo-Moreno, Antanas Šidlauskas, and Gintaras Juodzbalys
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Mandibular Nerve ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Iatrogenic Disease ,Mandibular nerve ,Mandibular canal ,Inferior alveolar nerve ,Injury Severity Score ,Risk Factors ,medicine ,Humans ,Dental implant ,Pain Measurement ,Dental Implants ,business.industry ,Dental Implantation, Endosseous ,Recovery of Function ,Middle Aged ,Nerve injury ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cranial Nerve Injury ,Anesthesia ,Female ,Trigeminal Nerve Injuries ,Implant ,Oral Surgery ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Objectives Inferior alveolar nerve (IAN) is the most commonly injured nerve (64.4%) during implant treatment. At present, no standardized protocol exists for clinicians to manage IAN injury related with implant surgery. Therefore, the purposes of the present article were to analyze the reasons for nerve injury and to propose guidelines in managing IAN injury. Material and methods Patients with IAN sensory disturbances after implant treatment were recruited for the study. Sixteen patients, eight men and eight women, with a mean age of 52.2 ± 8.1 years participated in this study. Patient examination, treatment, and IAN sensory function recovery monitoring were performed following six-step IAN injury during dental implant surgery (IANIDIS) protocol. The control group was composed of 25 healthy volunteers who never had IAN sensory disturbances or any trauma in the maxillofacial region. Results The IAN sensory disturbances were scored as following: 5 (31.25%) had hyperalgesia and 11 (68.75%) expressed hypoalgesia. The mean asymmetry index (AI) was calculated for each patient and varied from 0.6 to 3.2. Overall, 31.3% of nerve injury patients were classified as mild, 31.3% as moderate, and remaining 37.5% as severe injury. All patients were successfully treated with proposed IANIDIS protocol. Conclusion The most frequent (50%) risk factor for IAN injury was intraoperative bleeding during bone preparation. The most common (56.3%) etiological risk factor of nerve injury was dental implant. A six-step protocol aimed at managing patients with IAN injury, during dental implant surgery, was a useful tool that could provide successful treatment outcome.
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- 2011
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31. Radiographic changes of the jaws in HbSS and HbSC genotypes of sickle cell disease
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Christiano Oliveira-Santos, Jean Nunes dos Santos, Iêda Crusoé-Rebello, Frederico Sampaio Neves, Maria Christina Bahiana Olympio da Silva, Dayane Araújo de Almeida, Maria Betânia Pereira Toralles, and Maria Isabela Guimarães Campos
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Molar ,education.field_of_study ,Hemoglobin SC Disease ,business.industry ,Radiography ,Osteoporosis ,Population ,Dentistry ,Mandibular canal ,respiratory system ,medicine.disease ,Sickle cell anemia ,respiratory tract diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Genotype ,Medicine ,business ,education ,General Dentistry - Abstract
This study used panoramic radiographs to evaluate the presence of radiographic changes in the jaws of a population who had sickle cell disease (SCD). The authors compared the frequency of findings between subjects with and without SCD. Panoramic radiographs of 71 subjects with SCD (36 with HbSS and 35 with HbSC) and 52 healthy controls (HbAA) were evaluated for the presence of the following radiographic alterations: radiopaque areas, increased spacing of bony trabeculae, horizontal arrangement of bony trabeculae, and absence of mandibular canal corticalization. The control group had a significantly smaller number of all the radiographic features evaluated. Differences were not statistically significant between the groups with HbSS and HbSC, except for more trabecular spacing in the molar region in the HbSS genotype, suggesting a possible correlation between radiographic findings and disease presentation.
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- 2011
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32. Demonstration of the accessory mental foramen using rotational panoramic radiography compared with cone-beam computed tomography
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Kino Nakahara, Kenichi Gotoh, Munetaka Naitoh, Eiichiro Ariji, and Kazuhito Yoshida
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Dental practice ,Cone beam computed tomography ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Radiography ,Mandibular canal ,Computed tomography ,Anatomy ,musculoskeletal system ,Computed tomographic ,Mental foramen ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,stomatognathic system ,medicine ,Oral Surgery ,business - Abstract
Objective: Rotational panoramic radiography is routinely used in dental practice. It has not been clarified, however, whether an accessory mental foramen can be demonstrated using this technique. The visibility of accessory mental foramina on rotational panoramic radiographs was compared with those on para-panoramic images reconstructed from cone-beam computed tomographic (CBCT) images. Materials and methods: A total of 365 patients (130 males and 235 females) were retrospectively analyzed. Para-panoramic images were reconstructed from CBCT images with the accessory mental foramen/foramina using three-dimensional visualization and measurement software, and then the accessory mental foramen on rotational panoramic images was compared with that on para-panoramic images. Results: A total of 37 accessory mental foramina were observed in 28 patients on CBCT images. The rate of being able to visualize the accessory mental foramen or bony canal between the point of bifurcation from the mandibular canal and the accessory mental foramen on rotational panoramic radiographs was 48.6% (18 of 37 accessory mental foramina). Conclusion: Approximately half of the accessory mental foramina-positive CBCT images demonstrated the accessory mental foramen, or bony canal between the point of bifurcation from the mandibular canal and accessory mental foramen on rotational panoramic radiographs. To cite this article: Naitoh M, Yoshida K, Nakahara K, Gotoh K, Ariji E. Demonstration of accessory mental foramen using rotational panoramic radiography compared with cone-beam computed tomography. Clin. Oral Impl. Res. xx, 2011; 000–000.
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- 2011
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33. Vertical ridge augmentation of atrophic posterior mandible using an inlay technique with a xenograft without miniscrews and miniplates: case series
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Adriano Piattelli, Bartolomeo Assenza, Antonio Scarano, Giovanna Murmura, F Carinci, and Maurizio Piattelli
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Periosteum ,Inlay ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Dentistry ,Mandibular canal ,Osteotomy ,Prosthesis ,Transplantation ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Coronal plane ,Medicine ,Implant ,Oral Surgery ,business - Abstract
Background: Rehabilitation of partially or totally edentulous posterior mandible with implant-supported prosthesis has become a common practice in the last few decades, with reliable long-term results. The use of miniscrews and miniplates have been reported to increase the risk of fracture of the osteotomy segments. The purpose of this case series was to use an inlay technique, without the use of miniscrews and miniplates for stabilization of the transported bone fragments. Materials and methods: Nine consecutive patients (six men and three women) aged between 26 and 51 years (mean 44 years) were enrolled in this study. A horizontal osteotomy was performed 2–3 mm above the mandibular canal, and two oblique cuts were made using a piezosurgery device. The final phase of the osteotomy was performed with chisels. The osteotomized segment was then raised in the coronal direction, sparing the lingual periosteum. Two miniblocks of xenograft without miniscrews and miniplates were inserted mesially and distally between the cranial osteotomized segment and the mandibular basal bone. The residual space was filled with particles of cortico-cancellous porcine bone. Four months after surgery, a panoramic X-ray was taken before implant insertion. A bone trephine with an internal diameter of 2 mm was used as the second dental drill to take a bone core biopsy during preparation of the #35 and #37 or #45 and #47 implant sites. Results: The postoperative course was uneventful in seven of the nine patients. No dehiscence of the mucosa was observed at the marginal ridge of the mobilized fragment. Newly formed bone was present near the osteotomized segments, and was observed in the bottom half of the specimens and was identified by its higher affinity toward the staining. Newly formed bone was observed to be in close contact with the particles of biomaterials. No gaps or connective tissue were present at the bone–biomaterial interface. Histomorphometry demonstrated that 44±2.1% of the specimens was composed by newly formed bone, 18±0.8% by marrow spaces, and 33±2.4% by the residual grafted biomaterial. Conclusion: The rigidity of the equine collagenated block allowed to eliminate the use of miniscrews and miniplates and simplified the technique. Moreover, the rigidity of the block allowed maintenance of the space. To cite this article: Scarano A, Carinci F, Assenza B, Piattelli M, Murmura G, Piattelli A. Vertical ridge augmentation of atrophic posterior mandible using an inlay technique with a xenograft without miniscrews and miniplates: case series. Clin. Oral Impl. Res. 22, 2011; 1125–1130 doi: 10.1111/j.1600-0501.2010.02083.x
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- 2011
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34. Vertical augmentation with interpositional blocks of anorganic bovine bone vs. 7-mm-long implants in posterior mandibles: 1-year results of a randomized clinical trial
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Luigi Checchi, Roberto Pistilli, Pietro Felice, Gerardo Pellegrino, and Marco Esposito
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Edentulism ,business.industry ,Wound dehiscence ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Dentistry ,Mandibular canal ,medicine.disease ,Prosthesis ,law.invention ,Bovine bone ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,medicine ,Implant ,Oral Surgery ,Early failure ,business - Abstract
Objectives: To evaluate whether 7-mm-long implants could be an alternative to longer implants placed in vertically augmented posterior mandibles. Materials and methods: Sixty patients with posterior mandibular edentulism with 7–8 mm bone height above the mandibular canal were randomized to either vertical augmentation with anorganic bovine bone blocks and delayed 5-month placement of � 10 mm implants or to receive 7-mm-long implants. Four months after implant placement, provisional prostheses were delivered, replaced after 4 months, by definitive prostheses. The outcome measures were prosthesis and implant failures, any complications and peri-implant marginal bone levels. All patients were followed to 1 year after loading. Results: One patient dropped out from the short implant group. In two augmented mandibles, there was not sufficient bone to place 10-mm-long implants possibly because the blocks had broken apart during insertion. One prosthesis could not be placed when planned in the 7 mm group vs. three prostheses in the augmented group, because of early failure of one implant in each patient. Four complications (wound dehiscence) occurred during graft healing in the augmented group vs. none in the 7 mm group. No complications occurred after implant placement. These differences were not statistically significant. One year after loading, patients of both groups lost an average of 1 mm of peri-implant bone. There no statistically significant differences in bone loss between groups. Conclusions: When residual bone height over the mandibular canal is between 7 and 8 mm, 7 mm short implants might be a preferable choice than vertical augmentation, reducing the chair time, expenses and morbidity. These 1-year preliminary results need to be confirmed by follow-up of at least 5 years.
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- 2010
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35. Assessment of the risk of perforation of the mandibular canal by implant drill using density and thickness parameters
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Ozkan Cem Dilek and Onur Başa
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Molar ,Bone density ,business.industry ,Perforation (oil well) ,Mandible ,Mandibular canal ,Dentistry ,Inferior alveolar nerve ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,stomatognathic system ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Premolar ,Implant ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,business ,General Dentistry - Abstract
Gerodontology 2009;doi: 10.1111/j.1741-2358.2009.00362.x Assessment of the risk of perforation of the mandibular canal by implant drill using density and thickness parameters Objective: The objective of this study was to investigate whether the resistance of the bone surrounding the mandibular canal had sufficient density and thickness to avoid perforation by drills when preparing the bed of the implant. Background: Damage to the inferior alveolar nerve (IAN) is more common than expected. This injury may lead to serious complications ranging from mild paresthesia to total anaesthesia of the lower jaw. Materials and methods: The CT images of 99 patients, whose ages ranged between 20 and 79 years, and who applied for an implant application to the posterior aspect of the mandible were included in this study. Results: The overall average bone thickness in the premolar and molar regions was 0.8717 ± 0.1818 and 0.8556 ± 0.1756 mm, respectively, whereas the bone density in the premolar and molar regions was 649.18 ± 241.42 and 584.44 ± 222.73 Hounsfield Units (HU), respectively (p
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- 2010
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36. Inferior alveolar nerve injury: Correlation between indicators of risk on panoramic radiographs and the incidence of tooth and mandibular canal contact on cone‐beam computed tomography scans in a Western Australian population
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Lionel Thompson, Zoe H. Brook, Nigel M. King, Michael O'Halloran, Bernard Koong, Lisa M. Otway, and Kate L. Winstanley
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Adult ,Male ,Molar ,Cone beam computed tomography ,Panoramic radiograph ,Adolescent ,Radiography ,Mandibular canal ,Inferior alveolar nerve ,Risk Assessment ,Surgical planning ,03 medical and health sciences ,Imaging, Three-Dimensional ,0302 clinical medicine ,stomatognathic system ,Radiography, Panoramic ,Humans ,Medicine ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Orthodontics ,business.industry ,Tooth, Impacted ,Western Australia ,030206 dentistry ,General Medicine ,Cone-Beam Computed Tomography ,Middle Aged ,respiratory system ,Exact test ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Female ,Molar, Third ,Trigeminal Nerve Injuries ,business - Abstract
Aim The aim of the present study was to assess risks prior to third molar removal. A 2-D panoramic radiograph or a 3-D cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) scan can be used to visualize the proximity of the third molar to the mandibular canal. We aimed to correlate panoramic indicators of risk with the incidence of contact between these two structures on CBCT scans. Methods Patients were selected from a Western Australian population if they had a panoramic radiograph that illustrated signs of risk of inferior alveolar nerve injury and had a CBCT scan on file. Statistically-significant relationships between the relative position and distance between the mandibular canal and third molar were investigated using χ2 -test and Fisher's exact test in Stata version 13. Results Within the Western Australian sample (N = 100), of six possible panoramic indicators of risk, two were significantly associated with contact between the tooth and mandibular canal on CBCT: (a) interruption of the radiographic white line of the canal; and (b) darkening of the root(s). Conclusions Two panoramic radiograph risk signs are significantly more likely to indicate contact on the CBCT scans: interruption of the white line and darkening of the root(s). Further research is required to develop CBCT prescription guidelines for surgical planning.
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- 2018
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37. Distance Between External Cortical Bone and Mandibular Canal for Harvesting Ramus Graft: A Human Cadaver Study
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Hom-Lay Wang, Daylene Jack-Min Leong, Jingjing Li, and Ildefonso Moreno
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Human cadaver ,Molar ,Bone Transplantation ,business.industry ,Mandibular canal ,Alveolar Ridge Augmentation ,Mandible ,Anatomy ,Inferior alveolar nerve ,Mandibular first molar ,stomatognathic diseases ,Cementoenamel junction ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,stomatognathic system ,Cadaver ,Alveolar Process ,Tissue and Organ Harvesting ,Humans ,Jaw, Edentulous ,Periodontics ,Medicine ,Cortical bone ,Tooth Root ,business - Abstract
Background: The aims of this study are to determine the distance of the external surface of the buccal cortical plate to the inferior alveolar canal in the mandibular molar region and to propose a safe thickness for harvesting a mandibular ramus block graft. Methods: Thirty-four cadavers consisting of 26 dentate jaws and eight jaws in the edentulous molar region were used in this study. All mandibular ramus grafts were harvested by one investigator with the grafts extending from the external oblique ridge (EOR) and 15 mm inferiorly in the apico-coronal direction and extending from the mid-buccal aspect of the first molar to the mid-buccal aspect of the third molar in the mesiodistal direction. Measurements were made of the cortical bone thickness of the harvested ramus graft and from the cementoenamel junction (CEJ) to the EOR, the CEJ to the mandibular border, and the CEJ to the inferior alveolar nerve (IAN). Results: The average buccal cortical plate thickness in dentate mandibles was 2.76 – 0.13 mm, whereas in edentulous posterior mandibles it was 2.52 – 0.32 mm. The IANs were exposed in all jaws but were intact. Conclusion: The safe thickness to harvest ramus grafts was determined to be 2.5 to 3.0 mm. J Periodontol 2010;81:239243.
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- 2010
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38. The position of the mandibular canal and histologic feature of the inferior alveolar nerve
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Hasan Ozan, Kıvanç Kamburoğlu, Tuncer Özen, Huseyin Balcioglu, Tunç Kutoğlu, Cenk Kilic, and Bulent Kurt
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Trigeminal nerve ,Molar ,Histology ,business.industry ,Mandible ,Mandibular canal ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,Inferior alveolar nerve ,Mental foramen ,Inferior alveolar artery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,stomatognathic system ,medicine.artery ,medicine ,Premolar ,business - Abstract
The inferior alveolar nerve is the one of the large branches of the mandibular division of the trigeminal nerve. It is vulnerable during surgical procedures of the mandible. Despite its importance, no anatomical and histological examination has been conducted to provide a detailed cross-sectional morphology of the mandibular canal according to dental status. Therefore, the present study aimed to identify the position of the mandibular canal through direct measurement and to determine the branches of the inferior alveolar nerve through histologic examination. The area between the anterior margin of the third molar and the anterior margin of the second premolar of dentulous, partially dentulous, and edentulous hemimandible specimens (n = 49) from 26 human cadavers was serially sectioned into seven segments, and specific distances were measured using digital calipers. Following this, 5-microm cross-sections were prepared along the mandibular canal and mental foramen, and examined by fluorescence microscopy. The mandibular canal was located at a mean distance of 10.52 mm above the inferior margin of the mandible. The mean maximum diameters of the mandibular canal, inferior alveolar nerve, inferior alveolar artery, and inferior alveolar vein were 2.52, 1.84, 0.42, and 0.58 mm, respectively. This study found that the inferior alveolar nerve often gives rise to several branches at each level (range 0-3). To minimize the risk of injury, knowledge of the small branches of the nerve and of the detailed findings regarding the position of the mandibular canal reported here should be considered when planning mandibular surgery, especially during implant placement.
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- 2009
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39. Cone-Beam CT for Preoperative Implant Planning in the Posterior Mandible: Visibility of Anatomic Landmarks
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Kerstin Gröndahl, Annika Ekestubbe, and Sara Lofthag-Hansen
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Male ,Cone beam computed tomography ,Mandibular Nerve ,Mandibular canal ,Dentistry ,Mandible ,Patient Care Planning ,Mental foramen ,stomatognathic system ,Preoperative Care ,Alveolar Process ,medicine ,Premolar ,Humans ,Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted ,General Dentistry ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,Observer Variation ,business.industry ,Dental Implantation, Endosseous ,Visibility (geometry) ,Cone-Beam Computed Tomography ,Middle Aged ,Sagittal plane ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,Crest ,Oral Surgery ,business - Abstract
Background: The technical development has given a new type of modality, cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT). This technique has a high potential to solve different diagnostic problems among which is preoperative planning for implants in the posterior mandible. Purpose: The aim of this retrospective study was to evaluate the visibility of the mandibular canal and the marginal bone crest and the agreement between observers in images from one CBCT technique. Materials and Methods: Thirty consecutive patients were examined with 3D Accuitomo® (J. Morita Mfg. Corp., Kyoto, Japan) in one side of the mandible, where the second premolar and molars were lost. The examined volume was 30 by 40 mm. Seven observers evaluated the visibility and the location of the mandibular canal and the marginal crest by visually deciding if the structures were clearly visible, probably visible, or invisible in one cross-sectional image, approximately 1 cm posterior to the mental foramen. In a later session, the observers also marked the two anatomic structures. If the decision was not “clearly visible” or if the anatomic structures were difficult to identify, the observers had to use other cross-sectional, axial, and/or sagittal images in the volume. Results: The confidence among the observers evaluating the marginal bone crest was high. Two observers never used any other images, and the rest took help in two to seven cases. When marking the mandibular canal, the observers, in general, used more images. In five cases (17%), all the observers only used the single cross-sectional image. The agreement on the position of the canal was also high. Conclusion: With this CBCT modality (3D Accuitomo), the visibility of the mandibular canal and the marginal crest, as well as the observer agreement of the location of these structures, was high. Hence, the 3D Accuitomo can be recommended for implant planning in the posterior mandible.
- Published
- 2009
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40. Neuropathic pain resulting from implant placement: case report and diagnostic conclusions
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Bodo Kress, Michael Leckel, and Marc Schmitter
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Dysesthesia ,Hypesthesia ,business.industry ,Mandibular Nerve ,Dental Implantation, Endosseous ,Perforation (oil well) ,Mandible ,Mandibular canal ,Middle Aged ,Neurovascular bundle ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Facial Pain ,Neuropathic pain ,Radiography, Dental ,medicine ,Humans ,Neuralgia ,Trigeminal Nerve Injuries ,Implant ,medicine.symptom ,business ,General Dentistry - Abstract
SUMMARY Temporary or persisting dysesthesia of the nervus alveolaris inferior has often been described as a complication of implant surgery of the lower mandible. In most cases, lesion of the nerve results in anaesthesia of the innervated region, a symptom clearly indicative of correct diagnosis. In our case report, however, a minor perforation of the roof of the mandibular canal during implant placement apparently provoked discrete irritation of the nerve, resulting in persistent neuropathic pain without concomitant hypesthesia or dysesthesia. Because the canal could not be detected in conventional dental radiographs, this uncharacteristic situation made correct diagnosis difficult and led to unnecessary surgical procedures including extraction of adjacent teeth. Medical imaging [computed tomography (CT)] finally revealed the close proximity of the apex of the implant and the bony structure of the mandibular canal. The effect on the nervus alveolaris inferior was also demonstrated using an innovative high-resolution dental magnetic-resonance-imaging technique reflecting vascular reactions of the neurovascular bundle after potentially damaging surgical intervention. After removal of the causative implant, the pain gradually faded over a period of a year.
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- 2009
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41. New safety margins for chin bone harvesting based on the course of the mandibular incisive canal in CT
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Werner Zechner, Georg Watzek, Bernhard Pommer, André Gahleitner, and Gabor Tepper
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Chin ,Mandibular Nerve ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Mandibular nerve ,Mandibular canal ,Dentistry ,Mandible ,Bone grafting ,Mental foramen ,Postoperative Complications ,stomatognathic system ,medicine ,Humans ,Cranial Nerve Injuries ,Bone Transplantation ,Mandibular incisive canal ,business.industry ,Toothache ,Dentin Sensitivity ,Reference Standards ,Tooth Apex ,Osteotomy ,stomatognathic diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Tooth Sensitivity ,Tissue and Organ Harvesting ,Safety ,Oral Surgery ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business - Abstract
Objectives: Altered pulp sensitivity of anterior lower teeth is a frequent finding following chin bone harvesting. Persistent loss of tooth sensitivity has been reported in up to 20% of the patients. The aim of this study was to evaluate current recommendations for the location of the harvest zone with respect to the course of the mandibular incisive canal (MIC), the intrabony continuation of the mandibular canal mesial to the mental foramen. Material and methods: On computed tomographic (CT) scans of 50 dentate mandibles, the MIC was located and its distance to the root apices, to the labial bony surface, and to the inferior margin of the mandible was assessed. The risk of nerve injury and the percentage of patients suitable for chin bone grafting were calculated. Results: Respecting current recommendations for chin bone grafting, the content of the MIC was endangered in 57% of the CTs. Therefore, new safety margins are suggested: the chin bone should be harvested at least 8mm below the tooth apices with a maximum harvest depth of 4mm. Conclusions: Applying the new safety recommendations and proper patient selection in chin bone harvesting could reduce the risk of altered postoperative tooth sensitivity due to injury of the mandibular incisive nerve.
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- 2008
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42. Methods of determining the relationship of the mandibular canal and third molars: a survey of Australian oral and maxillofacial surgeons
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Marc Tennant, MJ Pharoah, Max Bulsara, and Bernard Koong
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Molar ,Panoramic radiograph ,Mandibular Nerve ,Radiography ,Frequency of use ,Mandibular canal ,Dentistry ,Mandible ,Inferior alveolar nerve ,Postoperative Complications ,Risk Factors ,Radiography, Panoramic ,Surgical extraction ,Humans ,Medicine ,Paresthesia ,Tooth Root ,Radiography, Bitewing ,General Dentistry ,Practice Patterns, Dentists' ,Orthodontics ,Maxillofacial surgeons ,business.industry ,Australia ,Surgery, Oral ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Molar, Third ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,Forecasting - Abstract
Surgical extraction of third molars is one of the most common oral and maxillofacial surgical procedures performed and may have a number of associated complications. One of these complications is inferior alveolar nerve (IAN) dysaesthesia or impairment of sensory perception (including paraesthesia and/or anaesthesia). Previous studies assume that most clinicians use various combinations of nine radiologic criteria on panoramic radiographs as indicators of the relationship and, therefore, predictors of the risk of postoperative dysaesthesia. Our study assessed both the current radiologic modalities and assessment criteria used by Australian oral and maxillofacial surgeons when determining the proximity of mandibular canal to third molars.A survey of all surgeon members of the Australian and New Zealand Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons (ANZOMS) practising in Australia was undertaken.Of the 105 questionnaires sent to surgeons, 72 responses (68 per cent) were returned. All surgeons reported using the panoramic radiograph but only 25 per cent considered it sufficiently accurate in determining the relationship between the mandibular canal (MC) and the third molar root, while 61 per cent of surgeons use CT for this purpose but the average frequency of use was very low (five per cent). This study also revealed that the nine radiologic criteria on a panoramic radiograph are used to varying extents by Australian surgeons. Nearly all surgeons use 'change in MC direction' and 'MC narrowing' to determine and close relationship. Thirty-one per cent used superimposition of the MC and the root of the third molar alone and 24 per cent used appearance of contact of the root with the MC alone in the absence of any other radiologic criteria to indicate close or intimate relationship.Further research is required to determine the accuracy and observer agreement or reliability of using the nine panoramic characteristics, to determine this relationship and whether the presurgical determination of proximity and position (buccal or lingual) of the canal utilizing CT has any usefulness in determining the surgical protocol or affect on postoperative morbidity.
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- 2006
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43. Failure to obtain adequate anaesthesia associated with a bifid mandibular canal: a case report
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K. Lew and Grant Townsend
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Male ,Lidocaine ,Anesthesia, Dental ,Mandibular Nerve ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Radiography ,Mandibular nerve ,Gingiva ,Dentistry ,Mandibular canal ,Lingual Nerve ,Mandible ,Inferior alveolar nerve ,stomatognathic system ,Humans ,Medicine ,Anesthetics, Local ,General Dentistry ,Lingual nerve ,Orthodontics ,business.industry ,Nerve Block ,Middle Aged ,stomatognathic diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Nerve block ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The inferior alveolar nerve (IAN) block is the most common method for obtaining mandibular anaesthesia in dental practice but it is estimated to have a success rate of only 80 to 85 per cent. Causes of failure include problems with operator technique and anatomical variation between individuals. This case report involves a patient who received IAN blocks on two separate occasions that resulted in only partial anaesthesia of the ipsilateral side of the mandible. Radiographic assessment disclosed the presence of bifid mandibular canals that were present bilaterally and that may have affected the outcomes of the local anaesthetic procedures. Previous studies of bifid mandibular canals are reviewed and suggestions provided that should enable clinicians to differentially diagnose, and then manage, cases where IAN blocks result in inadequate mandibular anaesthesia.
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- 2006
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44. Analysis of Failed Commercially Pure Titanium Dental Implants: A Scanning Electron Microscopy and Energy-Dispersive Spectrometer X-Ray Study
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Jamil Awad Shibli, Elcio Marcantonio, Susana d'Avila, and Antonio Carlos Guastaldi
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Male ,Materials science ,Biocompatibility ,Surface Properties ,Scanning electron microscope ,medicine.medical_treatment ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Dentistry ,Mandibular canal ,Biocompatible Materials ,Osseointegration ,medicine ,Humans ,Dental Restoration Failure ,Dental implant ,Dental alveolus ,Dental Implants ,Titanium ,business.industry ,Spectrometry, X-Ray Emission ,Middle Aged ,Equipment Failure Analysis ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Microscopy, Electron, Scanning ,Equipment Contamination ,Periodontics ,Female ,Implant ,business - Abstract
The failure of osseointegration in oral rehabilitation has gained importance in current literature and in clinical practice. The integration of titanium dental implants in alveolar bone has been partly ascribed to the biocompatibility of the implant surface oxide layer. The aim of this investigation was to analyze the surface topography and composition of failed titanium dental implants in order to determine possible causes of failure.Twenty-one commercially pure titanium (cpTi) implants were retrieved from 16 patients (mean age of 50.33 +/- 11.81 years). Fourteen implants were retrieved before loading (early failures), six after loading (late failures), and one because of mandibular canal damage. The failure criterion was lack of osseointegration characterized as dental implant mobility. Two unused implants were used as a control group. All implant surfaces were examined by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and energy-dispersive spectrometer x-ray (EDS) to element analysis. Evaluations were performed on several locations of the same implant.SEM showed that the surface of all retrieved implants consisted of different degrees of organic residues, appearing mainly as dark stains. The surface topography presented as grooves and ridges along the machined surface similar to control group. Overall, foreign elements such as carbon, oxygen, sodium, calcium, silicon, and aluminum were detected in failed implants. The implants from control group presented no macroscopic contamination and clear signs of titanium.These preliminary results do not suggest any material-related cause for implant failures, although different element composition was assessed between failed implants and control implants.
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- 2005
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45. LATERAL MANDIBULAR WALL THICKNESS IN TURSIOPS TRUNCATUS: VARIATION DUE TO SEX AND AGE
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Jason E. Kosove, J. G. M. Thewissen, Sirpa Nummela, and Terry E. Lancaster
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biology ,Mandible ,Mandibular foramen ,Mandibular canal ,Cetacea ,Anatomy ,Aquatic Science ,Bottlenose dolphin ,biology.organism_classification ,Skull ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,stomatognathic system ,medicine ,Wall thickness ,Transect ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
In odontocetes the mandibular bone serves two functions: to capture prey, and as a means of the reception and transmission of sound waves through a fat body in the mandibular canal, which opens posteriorly as the mandibular foramen. The posterior part of the lateral wall of the odontocete mandible is thin, and appears to represent a compromise between a strong mandible for prey capture and a thin vibrating plate for hearing. We studied the intraspecific variation of minimum thickness of the lateral mandibular wall along four transects (T1-T4) at the area of the mandibular foramen, in relation to the skull size and the mandibular size in different-aged bottlenose dolphins, Tursiops truncatus (18 females between 1 and 42 yr, 17 males between 1 and 32 yr). The minimum thickness was absolutely at its lowest at the most posterior transect T1, but did not vary significantly between the sexes or between the ages. The minimum thickness varied significantly at the two most anterior transects, T3 and T4, both between the sexes and among the ages. The thickness increased throughout life among males, whereas in females it first increased and then starts to decrease around the age of 20.
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- 2004
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46. Development of the supraorbital and mandibular lateral line canals in the cichlid,archocentrus nigrofasciatus
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Melissa L. Tarby and Jacqueline F. Webb
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Male ,Mandibular canal ,Mandible ,Biology ,Osteogenesis ,Cichlid ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Archocentrus ,Animals ,Process (anatomy) ,Dermal bone ,Ossification ,Skull ,Cichlids ,Anatomy ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,Animal Science and Zoology ,sense organs ,Lateral Line Canal ,Line (text file) ,medicine.symptom ,Mechanoreceptors ,Orbit ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
The development of two of the cranial lateral line canals is described in the cichlid, Archocentrus nigrofasciatus. Four stages of canal morphogenesis are defined based on histological analysis of the supraorbital and mandibular canals. “Canal enclosure” and “canal ossification” are defined as two discrete stages in lateral line canal development, which differ in duration, an observation that has interesting implications for the ontogeny of lateral line function. Canal diameter in the vicinity of individual neuromasts begins to increase before ossification of the canal roof in each canal segment; this increase in canal diameter is accompanied by an increase in canal neuromast size. The mandibular canal generally develops later than the supraorbital canal in this species, but in both of these canals development of the different canal segments contained within a single dermal bone is asynchronous. These observations suggest that a dynamic process requiring integration and interaction among different tissues, in both space and time, underlies the development of the cranial lateral line canal system. The supraorbital and mandibular canals appear to demonstrate a “one-component” pattern of development in Archocentrus nigrofasciatus, where the walls of each canal segment grow up from the underlying dermal bone and then fuse to form the bony canal roof. This is contrary to numerous published reports that describe a “two-component” pattern of development in teleosts where the bony canal ossifies separately and then fuses with an underlying dermal bone. A survey of the literature in which lateral line canal development is described using histological analysis suggests that the occurrence of two different patterns of canal morphogenesis (“one-component” and “two-component”) may be due to phylogenetic variation in the pattern of the development of the lateral line canals. J. Morphol. 255:44–57, 2003. © 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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- 2002
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47. Evaluation of accuracy of computer-aided intraoperative positioning of endosseous oral implants in the edentulous mandible
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Franz Watzinger, Rolf Ewers, Michael Figl, Joachim Kettenbach, Helmar Bergmann, Wolfgang Birkfellner, Franz Kainberger, Sanda Patruta, Felix Wanschitz, and Christian Schopper
- Subjects
High-resolution computed tomography ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Perforation (oil well) ,Dentistry ,Navigation system ,Mandibular canal ,Computer aided surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cadaver ,medicine ,Computer-aided ,book.journal ,Tomography ,Oral Surgery ,business ,book - Abstract
The overall accuracy of a novel surgical computer-aided navigation system for placement of endosseous implants was evaluated. Five dry cadaver mandibles were scanned using high resolution computed tomography (HRCT). The position of four interforaminal dental implants was planned on the computer screen and transferred to the cadaver mandibles using VISIT, a surgical navigation software developed at the Vienna General Hospital. The specimens were HRCT-scanned again to compare the position of the implants with the preoperative plan on reformatted slices after matching of the pre- and postoperative data sets using the mutual information technique. The overall accuracy was 0.96 +/- 0.72 mm (range 0.0-3.5 mm). No perforation of the mandibular cortex or damage to the mandibular canal occurred. We conclude that computer-aided implant surgery can reach a level of accuracy where further clinical developments are feasible.
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- 2002
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48. Localisation of the mandibular canal using conventional spiral tomography: a human cadaver study
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Reinhilde Jacobs, D. van Steenberghe, Marc Quirynen, and C Bou Serhal
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business.industry ,Radiography ,Mandible ,Mandibular canal ,Anatomy ,Neurovascular bundle ,Mental foramen ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cadaver ,Medicine ,Tomography ,Oral Surgery ,business ,Spiral - Abstract
For certain surgical procedures (e.g. placement of implants), an accurate localisation of the mandibular canal is of utmost importance to avoid injuries to the neurovascular bundle. The aim of the present study was to evaluate, on human fresh cadavers (n=6), the accuracy of conventional spiral tomography for the localisation of the mandibular canal. By means of the Cranex TOME® multifunctional unit (Orion Corporation Soredex, Helsinki, Finland), tomographic slices were taken at 3 different locations in the left posterior mandible (distal to the mental foramen). The mandibles were then sectioned at these 3 sites with a microtome. With a digital sliding calliper, the following 3 measurements were performed both on the tomograms and the bone sections at the three sites: 1) distance from the crest to mandibular canal, 2) overall bone height and 3) bone width. Overestimations of the distance to the mandibular canal (8/18) ranged from 1.05 to 0.10 mm and underestimations from 0.30 to 1.36 mm. The same number of over- and underestimations occurred for the bone height (1.14 to 0.14 mm and 0.15 to 1.40 mm, respectively). The bone width scored more overestimations (10/18), ranging from 1.40 to 0.12 mm, while underestimations ranged from 0.25 to 1.35 mm. From the present results, it is concluded that spiral tomography using the Cranex TOME® multifunctional X-ray unit provides accurate information and sufficient detail for preoperative planning of implant placement in the posterior mandible.
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- 2001
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49. Detection of the mandibular canal via shaded surface display and multiplanar reconstruction of CT data
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André Gahleitner, G. Watzek, P. Solar, S. Rodinger, and A. Bednar
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medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Image quality ,Computer science ,Mandibular canal ,Dentistry ,Computed tomography ,Multiplanar reconstruction ,Stereo display ,Surface display ,Rendering (computer graphics) ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,medicine ,Radiographic Image Enhancement ,business ,Nuclear medicine ,General Dentistry - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the sensitivity of conventional two-dimensional (2D) multisection images (multiplanar rendering, MPR) and registered three-dimensional (3D) shaded surface images (shaded surface display, SSD) of standard axial computed tomography (CT) data for detecting the mandibular canal (MC) in the lower jaw of 136 patients. The patients, who had different indications for mandibular CT, were examined using standard axial CT scanning. Two post-processing programs were used for 3D visualization of the data sets. The cross-sectional rendered images and the shaded surface 3D images were graded for detection of the MC, the presence of artefacts, overall quality and clinical relevance. A 3D display of the MC was achieved using the MPR technique in 100% with high image quality. The surface rendered display depicted the MC in 80%. Artefacts markedly degraded the 3D displays obtained using the surface rendering technique; thus, SSD is an inappropriate technique for imaging the entire MC without manual segmentation. MPR-CT improves the sensitivity of CT imaging in the detection of the MC with very little time needed for post-processing compared with the SSD method. This post-processing modality should, therefore, be considered for serial studies of patients undergoing dental CT. The sensitivity of the MPR method is even superior to the standard axial CT slices.
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- 2001
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50. The mandibular canal of the edentulous jaw
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Gillian Logan, Karen E. Polland, Andrew Lockhart, L.M. Brocklebank, Stuart W. McDonald, Shona Munro, and Gordon Reford
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Male ,Histology ,Mandibular canal ,Mandible ,Inferior alveolar nerve ,Mental foramen ,stomatognathic system ,medicine ,Humans ,Jaw, Edentulous ,Foramen Magnum ,Bony Callus ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Orthodontics ,Foramen magnum ,Mandibular incisive canal ,business.industry ,Mandibular foramen ,Incisive canals ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,Middle Aged ,Radiography ,Dental Implantation ,stomatognathic diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,business - Abstract
The morphology of the mandibular canal after loss of teeth has received little detailed attention. Improved documentation of this topic would allow better interpretation of dental radiographs and would enable those engaged in tooth implantation to better understand the nature of the tissue into which the prostheses are placed. In this study on mandibles from seven dissecting room cadavers panoramic radiographs usually showed the mandibular canal clearly, an incisive canal less so. The wall of the mandibular canal was similar in dentate and edentulous mandibles, and was highly perforated, as suggested by Cryer (Anderson et al., 1991). In edentulous specimens, it was composed mainly of cancellous bone with only occasional single osteons. The inferior alveolar nerve near the mandibular foramen was a large trunk, consisting of three to four nerve bundles with connective tissue sheaths. It became more loosely arranged toward the mental foramen. Medial to the mental foramen, the nerves were frequently in the form of small bundles in the marrow. Any incisive canal was ill-defined and neurovascular bundles, when present, ran through a labyrinth of intertrabecular spaces.
- Published
- 2001
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