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Page Title: Chapter 4 Oral Anatomy
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MASTICATION AND DEGLUTITION
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Dental Volume 1 - Dentist training manual for military dentists
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EXFOLIATION

CHAPTER  4 ORAL ANATOMY This  chapter  covers  the  oral  anatomy  and physiology of the teeth, the histology of their tissues and supporting structures, and concentrates on the external  features  of  the  teeth.  To  understand  the material in this section, you must become familiar with the terms used to describe the external features of the teeth. In addition, you must know the numbering system  by  which  the  teeth  are  identified  on  the standard dental chart used by the armed services. As a basic  dental  assistant,  you  must  be  aware  that  teeth differ in size, shape, and other characteristics from one person to another. Such knowledge will be useful to you when you fill in dental charts, expose radiographs, clean  teeth,  and  assist  in  all  phases  of  dentistry throughout your career. FORMATION PERIOD As all living things are forming, they go through a developmental process to reach maturity or a final outcome. When teeth are in the odontogenesis phase (tooth formation), every tooth goes through three developmental  processes.  They  are  categorized  into the   growth,   calcification,   and   eruption   periods (illustrated in figure 4-1). The term emergence is used to describe the tooth as it is breaking through the gingival tissue. GROWTH PERIOD Dental development usually begins in the fifth or sixth week of prenatal life. By the seventh week, skin cells of the mouth called epithelium thicken along the ridge of the developing jaws creating a horse-shoe shaped band called the dental lamina. The growth period of development is divided into the bud, cap, and bell stages. Bud Stage From the dental lamina, patches of epithelial cells grow into the underlying tissues. These patches of cells are called tooth buds. As soon as the dental lamina is formed, the tooth buds for the primary teeth develop. Usually 10 tooth buds are present in each dental arch and they give rise to future primary teeth. Tooth buds for the permanent teeth form between the 17th week of fetal life through the age of 5 years. When the primary  teeth  are  lost,  permanent  teeth  will  replace them. Cap  Stage This  stage  is  also  known  as  proliferation (reproduction or multiplication) in which the cells of the tooth grow and the tooth bud takes a hollowed caplike shape. The epithelium of the cap will give rise to the enamel. The zone under the cap is called the dental papilla. The dental papilla gives rise to the dentin, cementum, and the pulp. Bell  Stage The  last  period  of  growth  is  also  known  as histodifferentiation   (the   acquisit   on   of   tissue characteristics by cell groups) or bell stage. It is here the ameloblast cells form the enamel, odontoblast cells form the dentin, and the cementoblast cells form the cementum. MORPHODIFFERENTIATION As the tooth is in the bell stage, it begins to take shape  and  form  through  a  process  called  mor- phodifferentiation. Enamel forming cells (ameloblast) and  dentin  forming  cells  (odontoblast)  line  up  on  a boundary line called dentinoenamel junction. APPOSITION Apposition refers to the depositing of the matrix for the hard dental structures. This matrix is deposited by  cells  along  the  boundary  line  at  the  end  of morphodifferentiation. CALCIFICATION Calcification (fig. 4-1) is the process by which organic tissue (the matrix formed during apposition) becomes hardened by a deposit of calcium or any mineral salts. Next, the tooth crown receives layers of enamel  that  start  at  the  top  of  the  crown  and  go downward over the sides to the cementonenamel junction. 4-1

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