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Kharkov National Medical University Department of Histology, cytology and embryology LECTURE for dentistry students
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TEETH AND THEIR DEVELOPMENT
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TOOTH HAS 4 PARTS: 4. PULP 2. DENTINE 1. ENAMEL 3. CEMENTUM PERIODONTAL LIGAMENT/ PDL ALVEOLAR BONE GINGIVA WABeresford
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TOOTH DERIVES FROM ECTODERMAL ENAMEL ORGAN (ENAMEL) AND MESENCHYME (REST) DENTAL LAMINA DENTAL PAPILLA DENTAL SAC/FOLLICLE ENAMEL ORGAN MESENCHYME ALVEOLAR BONE PULP DENTINE ENAMEL CEMENTUM PDL A BONE
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Oral ectoderm Oral ectoderm thickens and grows down to the mesenchyme forming Dental lamina Mesenchyme
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Formation of a BUD from the dental lamina ON THE INTERNAL SURFACE OF DENTAL LAMINA IS FORMED Bud Odontogenic mesenchyme Next step - formation of enamel organ from the bud
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BUD EXPANDS AND BECOMES ENAMEL ORGAN DENTAL LAMINA 1. DENTAL PAPILLA 2. DENTAL SAC ENAMEL ORGAN UNDERLIING IT MESENCHYME FORMS: 3. ALVEOLAR BONE
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Tooth development Enamel organ Dental lamina Dental papilla Dental sac Odontoblasts Dentine Ameloblasts Enamel Sheath of Hertwig
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TOOTH GERM: next steps DENTAL LAMINA - upper degenerates, lower forms 2nd bud DENTAL PAPILLA becomes pulp DENTAL SAC FORMS CEMENTUM outermost papilla cells have become Odontoblasts, producing dentine Ingrowing pulp vessels
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TOOTH GERM: next steps 2.Inner cells of enamel organ become ameloblasts, producing enamel DENTAL SAC still quiescent 1.Dentine is produced by odontoblasts Ingrowing pulp vessels become
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TOOTH GERM: all crown-forming elements present
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Ameloblas t Tomes’ process ENAMEL FORMATION - AMELOGENESIS Organic first deposits, + 30% mineral organic materials digested; replaced by mineral to 96% - maturation DEJ Ameloblasts are pushed up by thikening enamel and reduced by tooth eruption
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ENAMEL REDUCED enamel organ HERTWIG’S ROOT SHEATH = = DENTINE PULP Epithelial end of enamel organ CROWN odontoblasts ROOT FORMATION H. Root sheath breaks up, allowing sac mesenchymal cells to contact dentine and to produce cementum
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TOOTH & MANDIBLE DEVELOPMENT 1 0 TOOTH 2 0 TOOTH GERM MECKEL’S CARTILAGE TONGUE ALVEOLAR BONE DENTAL SAC ALVEOLAR NERVE Oral ectoderm
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ENAMEL REDUCED DENTAL EPITHELIUM TOOTH ERUPTION GINGIVAL EPITHELIUM still fusing with CUTICLE will wear away
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H. ROOT SHEATH LATE ERUPTING TOOTH DENTINE ENAMEL BONE GINGIVA CEMENTUM PDL PULP Rests of Mallasser’s – en.organ remnants of Root sheath Cementum starting as sheath breaks down!!
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Deciduous tooth Gingiva BODY of MANDIBLE ALVEOLAR BONE FROM MESENCHYME PDL FROM MESENCHYME Permanent tooth MANDIBULAR CENTRAL INCISORS at 2 y
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Deciduous tooth Cortical plate dense bone Permanent tooth MANDIBULAR CENTRAL INCISORS at 2 y - Bone Spongy/ cancellous bone Resorption of bone & deciduous root will start here
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13254760 YEARS YOUNG CHILD’S ERUPTION SEQUENCE Time of emergence Root formingCrown forming KEY 1 0 2nd Molar 2 0 Incisor 2 0 Cuspid 2 0 2nd PreMolar Deciduous Permanent
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1 0 Incisor 1 0 Cuspid 13254760 YEARS YOUNG CHILD’S ERUPTION SEQUENCE 1 0 2nd Molar 2 0 Incisor 2 0 Cuspid 2 0 2nd PreMolar
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PULP DENTINE CEMENTUM TOOTH STRUCTURE (decidious, permanent) ENAMEL CROWN Cervix ROOT } }
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ENAMEL: Boundaries Dentino-enamel junction DEJ Cemento-enamel junction - CEJ
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ENAMEL: Nature Enamel is the dead, very hard The dense packing, curved units = prisms composed of densely arranged mineral crystals, RODROD RODROD Mineral is hydroxyapatite, with Ca 2+, OH -, PO 4 --, etc, ions Cross-section of rods
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ENAMEL DEJ PRISMS/ RODS between prisms is organic Enamel is: 96% mineral, 3% water, 1% organic material First enamel is NON-PRISMATIC Last enamel is NON-PRISMATIC
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AT GROWTH. On section Contour lines of Retzius; rhytmic mineralisation S-shaped prisms form Hunter- Schreder bands
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DEJ DEJ is actually a little irregular, ENAMEL SPINDLE Odontoblast process stuck into enamel matrix and form nonmineralised spindles E D
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Plates, bunches (tuft) ENAMEL: plates, bunches, spindles – low mineralised sites for infection SPINDLE
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DENTINE is the major part of the tooth, The inner d. is not calcified called predentine
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DENTINE: Boundaries Dentino-enamel junction DEJ Dentino-cemental junction DCJ Pulp surface APICAL FORAMEN Orally exposed - pathological
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Odontoblasts DENTINE consists of: 1. MATRIX of collagen fibrils, mineral crystals, Penetrated by 2. DENTINAL TUBULES containing processes of cells - ODONTOBLASTS -whose bodies lie in the pulp Tomes fiber
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DENTINE: Composition MATRIX collagen fibrils and glycoproteins & proteoglycans 28% - Organic mineral crystals 72% - Inorganic MATRIX TUBULE
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DENTINE: MATRIX subdivided into TUBULES 1-3 m wide 1. Peritubular d. (without organic) 2. Inter-tubular d. (mineralised collagen fibrils)
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PULPPULP MATURE DENTINE: Varieties MANTLE D. just below DEJ = radial Korff fibrils CIRCUMPULPAL D.- main mass of dentine = perpendicular to tulules fibers- Ebner Predentine - UNCALSIFIED { REPARATIVE D. - response to caries/erosion * * Response relies on the pulp and the odontoblasts staying alive & active
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PULPPULP MATURE DENTINE: Sites for defects INTERGLOBULAR SPACES uncalcified DEAD TRACT - wide, empty dentinal tubules easily colonized by bacteria TOMES’ GRANULAR LAYER – the largest interglobular spaces SCLEROTIC DENTINE - tubules filled with mineral
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CEMENTUM: Boundaries Cemento-enamel junction CEJ Dentino-cemental junction DCJ Ligamento-cemental junction APICAL FORAMEN
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CEMENTUM: Role Cementum is the hard covering of the root that can: CONNECTS TO periodontal- ligament BY fibers, and thus attach the tooth to the alveolar bone. It is itself a kind of bone
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CEMENTUM: types The cervical half is thin and acellular - no cementocytes At top cementum is cellular
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PERIODONTAL LIGAMENT fibers (extrinsic) become imbedded in newly formed cementum CEMENTUM MATRIX Fine collagen fibrils - intrinsic MATRIX PROPORTIONS collagen fibrils and glycoproteins & proteoglycans – 30% Organic mineral crystals -- 70% Inorganic = Sharpey’s fibers
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PULPPULP CEMENTUM: Defects CORONAL CEMENTUM spurs, etc, on enamel HYPERCEMENTOSI S -excess deposition CEMENTOCLASIA - eroded cementum (occurs normally in decidual-tooth shedding) CEMENTICLES IN PDL
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PULPPULP CEMENTICLES Hard mineralized bodies found in the periodontal ligament or partially imbedded in cementum
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PULP DENTINE ENAMEL CEMENTUM PERIODONTAL LIGAMENT/ PDL ALVEOLAR BONE GINGIVA Its Odontoblasts alive for slow renewal of the dentine Provides antimicrobial defense for the dentine and itself Provides sensory feedback from the dentine WABeresford TOOTH TISSUES: Pulp & its role
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PULP CHAMBER CORONAL ACCESSORY CANAL ROOT CANAL APICAL FORAMEN
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PULP REGIONS Outer layer - ODONTOBLASTS Inner layer - loose c.t. with vessels and nerves
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PULP MATRIX - Ground substance, fibers Blood vessels, Nerves Lymphatics CELLS – Odontoblasts, Fibroblasts Macrophages, Mast cells Leukocytes
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PULP ODONTOBLASTS Nerves 1. PULP 2. ODONTOBLASTS 3. DENTINAL TUBULES 4. TOMES PROCESS Blood vessels Nerves: 12 4343 Sub-odontoblastic plexus in cell- poor zone of Weil
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PU LP DENTICLES/ PULP STONES Hard mineralized bodies found in the pulp TWO TYPES: Both may show layering/lamellar patterns from incremental growth
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ENAMEL 1. PERIODONTAL LIGAMENT/ PDL 2. ALVEOLAR BONE 3. GINGIVA 1- contains Scharpey’s perforating fibers from cementum to bone 2. Compact bone external, spongy - internal 3. Stratified slightly keratinized E, c.t. WABeresford PERIODONTIUM –supportive apparatus
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Gingiva BODY of MANDIBLE ALVEOLAR BONE FROM MESENCHYME PDL FROM MESENCHYME PERIODONTIUM – supportive apparatus
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RESTS OF HERTWIG’S ROOT SHEATH Sites for pathology – Cysts, tumors DENTINE ENAMEL BONE GINGIVA CEMENTUM PDL PULP Rests of Mallasser’s – en.organ Root sheath Cementum starting as
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