Mevlut Celikoglu
Akdeniz University
80 Papers
277 Citations
Mevlut Celikoglu is an academic researcher from Akdeniz University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Population. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 80 publications. Previous affiliations of Mevlut Celikoglu include Karadeniz Technical University & Atatürk University.
Chat about Author
Papers
Frequency and characteristics of tooth agenesis among an orthodontic patient population.
TL;DR: The prevalence of tooth agenesis was found to be 4.6 percent for the Turkish orthodontic patient population, and was found more frequently in females than in males, while intercanine and intermolar widths were significantly reduced in the hypodontia group for both jaws compared with the control group.
Frequency of agenesis, impaction, angulation, and related pathologic changes of third molar teeth in orthodontic patients.
TL;DR: It was shown that agenesis accounted for 17.3% and impaction for 35.9% of the pathologic features in this group of Turkish orthodontic patients aged 20 to 26 years of age, and a small proportion had pathologic changes of the ITMs.
128
Investigation of Transmigrated and Impacted Maxillary and Mandibular Canine Teeth in an Orthodontic Patient Population
TL;DR: If the diagnosis of canine impaction and transmigration in patients is made earlier, it is possible that the tooth might have been in a better position for orthodontic eruption into the arch and careful patient selection and preparation are therefore essential.
106
Validity of demirjian and nolla methods for dental age estimation for Northeastern Turkish children aged 5-16 years old.
Bilge Gülsüm Nur,Adem Kusgoz,Mehmet Bayram,Mevlut Celikoglu,Metin Nur,Saadettin Kayipmaz,Sina Yildirim +6 more
TL;DR: Nolla method was found to be a more accurate method for estimating DA in northeastern Turkish population, compared to the Demirjian and Nolla methods.
The pattern of malocclusion in a sample of orthodontic patients from Turkey.
TL;DR: Crowding in the upper and lower dental arches in a sample of Turkish population was the most frequent of all anomalies recorded with ranges of 70.0% and 47.3%, respectively.