Journal Article10.1002/J.0022-0337.2001.65.9.TB03438.X
Dental enamel formation and its impact on clinical dentistry
James P. Simmer,Jan C.-C. Hu +1 more
209
TL;DR: The current understanding of dental enamel formation is reviewed, and this information is related to clinical circumstances where this understanding may be particularly relevant.
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Abstract: The nature of tooth enamel is of inherent interest to dental professionals. The current-day clinical practice of dentistry involves the prevention of enamel demineralization, the promotion of enamel remineralization, the restoration of cavitated enamel where demineralization has become irreversible, the vital bleaching of dental enamel that has become discolored, and the diagnosis and treatment of developmental enamel malformations, which can be caused by environmental or genetic factors. On a daily basis, dental health providers make diagnostic and treatment decisions that are influenced by their understanding of tooth formation. A systemic condition during tooth development, such as high fever, can produce a pattern of enamel defects in the dentition. Knowing the timing of tooth development permits estimates about the timing of the disturbance. The process of enamel maturation continues following tooth eruption, so that erupted teeth can become less susceptible to decay over time. Mutations in the genes encoding enamel proteins lead to amelogenesis imperfecta, a collection of inherited diseases having enamel malformations as the predominant phenotype. Defects in the amelogenin gene cause X-linked amelogenesis imperfecta, and genes encoding other enamel proteins are candidates for autosomal forms. Here we review our current understanding of dental enamel formation, and relate this information to clinical circumstances where this understanding may be particularly relevant.
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Citations
Syndromes of the Head and Neck
TL;DR: The new Forfar and Arneil is, like its predecessors, a good book, but the absence of the chapter on ear, nose, and throat disorders must surely be an error and there is clearly a marketing problem for British publishers faced with American competition.
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Amelogenesis imperfecta: a classification and catalogue for the 21st century.
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Early childhood caries: Current evidence for aetiology and prevention
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Genes expressed in dental enamel development are associated with molar-incisor hypomineralization
Fabiano Jeremias,Mine Koruyucu,Erika Calvano Küchler,Merve Bayram,Elif Bahar Tuna,Kathleen Deeley,Ricardo Augusto Gonçalves Pierri,Juliana Feltrin de Souza,Camila Maria Bullio Fragelli,Marco Aurélio Benini Paschoal,Koray Gençay,Figen Seymen,Raquel Mantuaneli Scarel Caminaga,Lourdes Aparecida Martins dos Santos-Pinto,Alexandre R. Vieira +14 more
TL;DR: Several genes involved in enamel formation appear to contribute to molar-incisor hypomineralization (MIH), and allele and genotype frequencies between cases with MIH and controls were compared.
210
Novel ENAM mutation responsible for autosomal recessive amelogenesis imperfecta and localised enamel defects.
Thomas C. Hart,P.S. Hart,Michael C. Gorry,M D Michalec,O.H. Ryu,C Uygur,Didem Ozdemir,Sönmez Firatli,Gamze Aren,Erhan Firatli +9 more
TL;DR: Twenty consanguineous families with AI were identified in whom probands suggested autosomal recessive transmission, and homozygosity linkage studies were consistent for localisation of an AI locus in three families to the chromosome 4q region containing the ENAM gene.
144
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