Primary Dentition Review
Development and Eruption All 20 primaries begin calcifying 4-6 months in utero (2nd trimester) Crown completion in all primaries within first year after birth Eruption occurs from 6 months to 2 years Mixed dentition from age 6 to 12 Age 4-5 yrs, primate spaces develop due to growth of maxilla and mandible
Eruption Sequence Mandibular teeth erupt prior to their maxillary counterparts Sequence: Centrals Laterals 1st molars Canines 2nd molars
Exfoliation sequence: Preceeds the eruption sequence of the permanent dentition. Root resorption begins one year prior to exfoliation All primary second molars are lost about the same time
Unique Characteristics of Primary Teeth
All Primary Anterior Teeth... Apical 1/3 of root curves facially Facial crown surface smooth, no mamelons or perikymata CE line on lingual is more apical than facial Root is long relative to crown length Incisal edge is in-line or just facial to mid-root axis
Primary Incisors... Maxillary central only incisor where M-D > I-C Cingula of maxillary incisors are large (extending 1/3 of I-C length) Mandibular central is symmetrical, incisal edge horizontally straight
Primary Maxillary Canine... M-D width = I-C length* Mesial HOC more cervical than distal HOC (similar to mandibular 1st premolar) Mesial cusp ridge longer than distal cusp ridge (similar to maxillary 1st premolar) Longest primary root
Primary Mandibular Canine... Longest root of mandibular primary teeth Cusp tip in-line with mid-root axis No “moon-shape” curvature
General Characteristics of All Primary Molars Primary firsts smaller than seconds Occlusal tables are narrower F-L Root furcations nearer to CEJ with little/no root trunks Roots are slender and widely spread
Primary Maxillary 1st Molar Resembles maxillary premolar 4 cusps: MB and ML larger than DB and DL (sometimes absent) 3 fossae/pits: mesial, central, distal Grooves form an “H” pattern
More maxillary 1st... Transverse ridge connects MB & ML cusps Pronounced MB cervical prominence Facial bifurcation closest to CEJ compared to any other molars*
Primary Maxillary 2nd Molar Resembles permanent 1st molar Greatest root divergence of any primary molar Distal root bifurcation most apical of primary molars*
Primary Mandibular 1st Molar Doesn’t resemble any other tooth Large MB cusp covering 2/3 of facial surface Pronounced transverse ridge between MB and ML cusps Four cusps: MB, ML, DB, DL Occlusal table narrowest of molars; distal half wider F-L than mesial half*
More mandibular 1st... Prominent MB cervical prominence Mesial marginal ridge overdeveloped, resembling small cusp Mesial root apex is flat, almost square (unique) Mesial HOC more cervical than distal Mesial outline straight
Primary Mandibular 2nd Molar Most closely resembles permanent mandibular 1st molar All 3 buccal cusps more similar in size
All the Best on Your Exams