Taurodontism
Taurodontism is a condition found in the molar teeth of humans whereby the body of the tooth and pulp chamber is enlarged vertically at the expense of the roots. As a result, the floor of the pulp and the furcation of the tooth is moved apically down the root. The underlying mechanism of taurodontism is the failure or late invagination of Hertwig's epithelial root sheath, which is responsible for root formation and shaping causing an apical shift of the root furcation.[1]
Taurodontism | |
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Specialty | Dentistry |
The constriction at the amelocemental junction is usually reduced or absent. Taurodontism is most commonly found in permanent dentition although the term is traditionally applied to molar teeth. In some cases taurodontism seems to follow an autosomal dominant type of inheritance.
Taurodontism is found in association with amelogenesis imperfecta, ectodermal dysplasia and tricho-dento-osseous syndrome. The term means "bull like" teeth derived from similarity of these teeth to those of ungulate or cud-chewing animals.
According to Mangion taurodontism may be:
- A retrograde character
- A primitive pattern
- Mendelian recessive character
- Atavistic feature
- A mutation
It has also been reported in Klinefelter syndrome, XXYY and Down syndrome . The teeth involved are invariably molars, sometimes single and at the other times multiple teeth may be involved. The teeth themselves may look normal and do not have any particular anatomical character on clinical examination.
On a dental radiograph, the involved tooth looks rectangular in shape without apical taper. The pulp chamber is extremely large and the furcations may be only a few millimeters long at times.
Classification
The term taurodontism was coined by Sir Arthur Keith.[2] C.J.Shaw[3] further classified taurodontism into four distinct categories: Cynodont(Normal,) Hypotaurodont, Hypertaurodont and Mesotaurodont.
Later, Shifman & Chanannel[4] created a mathematical criteria based on the physiology of the tooth.
Here a tooth is tarodont if AB/AC >= 0.2 and BD > 2.5mm (A: Lowest point of the roof of the pulp chamber. B: Highest point of the floor of the pulp chamber C: Root Apex D: Cementoenamel junction (CEJ))
Normal: < 20%
Hypo-T: 20–20.9%
Meso-T: 30–39.9%
Hyper-T: 40–75%
Anthropology
Taurodontism is still a condition of anthropological importance as it was seen in Neanderthals.[5]
The trait "is common among extant New World monkeys, apes, and fossil hominins".[6]
References
- Yang, Jie; Wang, Shih-Kai; Choi, Murim; Reid, Bryan M.; Hu, Yuanyuan; Lee, Yuan-Ling; Herzog, Curtis R.; Kim-Berman, Hera; Lee, Moses (2015-01-01). "Taurodontism, variations in tooth number, and misshapened crowns in Wnt10a null mice and human kindreds". Molecular Genetics & Genomic Medicine. 3 (1): 40–58. doi:10.1002/mgg3.111. ISSN 2324-9269. PMC 4299714. PMID 25629078.
- Keith, A. Sir (1916). The antiquity of man. Third edit. (Williams and Norgate), London. Pp. 147-148,473-478.L
- Shaw JC (1928) Taurodont teeth in South African races. Journal of Anatomy 62, 476–98.
- Schiffman A, Chanannel I. Prevalence of taurodontism found in radiographic dental examination of 1200 young adult Israeli patients. Community Dent oral Epidemiol 1978; 6: 200-203.
- "Thames & Hudson Publishers | Essential illustrated art books | The Neanderthals Rediscovered | How Modern Science is Rewriting Their Story". www.thamesandhudson.com. Retrieved 2015-12-25.
- Irish, J.D. & Scott, G.R. (2016). A Companion to Dental Anthropology. Wiley Blackwell. Page 197. Retrieved January 14, 2017, from link.
External links
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