High-resolution observations of human premolar eruption

Using an optical instrument based on the principle of Moire´magnification to obtain resolution of less than 0.1 μm, eruption of maxillary second premolars was observed during the prefunctional phase of eruption in 10 children. The participants were observed on four occasions for approx. 30 min each,...

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Veröffentlicht in:Archives of oral biology 1996, Vol.41 (1), p.63-68
Hauptverfasser: Trentini, Christopher J., Proffit, William R.
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Proffit, William R.
description Using an optical instrument based on the principle of Moire´magnification to obtain resolution of less than 0.1 μm, eruption of maxillary second premolars was observed during the prefunctional phase of eruption in 10 children. The participants were observed on four occasions for approx. 30 min each, once in the afternoon and once in the evening on two consecutive days. For all participants, a pulsatile movement of the erupting tooth was noted in concert with the arterial pulse. Significant variations in short-term eruption rates and patterns were observed, with a mean rate of 0.28 pm/min over continuous 20-min periods but a range from -0.91 to 2.29 μm/min. During most sessions net eruption occurred, but in several of the 30-min periods there was little movement or intrusion. An unexplained cyclic phenomenon was observed consistently, which had a period of 20–50 s and a range of magnitudes from 0.12 to 2.22 pm. It seems clear that a discontinuous pattern of eruption occurs in short-term as well as longer-term observations.
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subjects Arteries
Bicuspid - anatomy & histology
Bicuspid - blood supply
Bicuspid - physiology
Child
Circadian Rhythm
Dentistry
Feasibility Studies
Female
Fiber Optic Technology - instrumentation
Humans
Image Enhancement - instrumentation
Male
Maxilla
Moire´ magnification
Myocardial Contraction
Optics and Photonics - instrumentation
Pilot Projects
Pulsatile Flow
Time Factors
tooth eruption
Tooth Eruption - physiology
title High-resolution observations of human premolar eruption
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