Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8460933 | Annals of Anatomy - Anatomischer Anzeiger | 2015 | 14 Pages |
Abstract
It has been shown that, in early stages (E13, E14), bone formation is characterized by apposition only. In stage E15, the bony crypt around the dental primordia is remodeled mostly by resorption of bone. In stage E18, the bone remodeling pattern shows resorption all along the bony gutter, which houses the molar primordia. The medial and lateral margins are characterized by apposition. At birth (stage P0), a bony septum has begun to form between the primordium m1 and of m2, arising from both sides and characterized by pure apposition of bone. In stage P4, the crypts of m1 and m2, and also that of m3, show bone resorption inside, while the medial and lateral bony margins show apposition of bone throughout. Generally, during development, the bone gradually encapsulates the dental primordia, in such a way that the bone reaches over the dental primordia and leaves only a continuous longish opening of about 200 μm width. The opening at the occlusal surface of m1, at the time of eruption, starting at stage P14, appears to have increased in size again. The distance between bone and dental primordium undergoes change during development. In erupted molars, it is around 100 μm, during early developmental stages, it may be as less as 20 μm. These data show the inevitability of bone remodeling.
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Authors
Ralf J. Radlanski, Herbert Renz, Camilla A. Zimmermann, Robert Mey, Eva Matalova,