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Prevalence of Root Dilaceration in Adult Patients Referred to Shiraz Dental School (2005-2010)

Statement of Problem: Dilaceration is defined as a sudden change in the axial inclination of root or between the crown and the root of a tooth. There is no previous study evaluating its prevalence in south of Iran. Purpose: This study evaluates the prevalence of root dilaceration on the basis of its...

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Autores principales: Nabavizadeh, MR, Sedigh Shamsi, M, Moazami, F, Abbaszadegan, A
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Shiraz University of Medical Sciences 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3977521/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24724139
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author Nabavizadeh, MR
Sedigh Shamsi, M
Moazami, F
Abbaszadegan, A
author_facet Nabavizadeh, MR
Sedigh Shamsi, M
Moazami, F
Abbaszadegan, A
author_sort Nabavizadeh, MR
collection PubMed
description Statement of Problem: Dilaceration is defined as a sudden change in the axial inclination of root or between the crown and the root of a tooth. There is no previous study evaluating its prevalence in south of Iran. Purpose: This study evaluates the prevalence of root dilaceration on the basis of its location in dental arch in a sample of dental patients referring to Shiraz dental school, Iran. Materials and Method: This retrospective study was performed using full mouth periapical radiographs of 250 patients who were referred to Shiraz dental school. Buccal and lingual dilaceration was determined by its known” bull’s eye” appearance in the radiographs or if the deviation was in the mesial or distal directions; the angle of 90 degree or greater between the deviation and the axis of root was the inclusion criteria. Results: Root dilaceration was detected in 0.3% of teeth and 7.2% of patients. It was distributed equally between the maxilla and mandible. Mandibular second molar was the most frequent dilacerated tooth (1.6%) followed by maxillary first molar (1.3%) and mandibular first molar (0.6%). The alveolar nerve was the most common anatomic structure near dilacerated teeth. Conclusion: According to this study, root dilaceration is an uncommon developmental anomaly which occurs mostly in the posterior teeth.
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spelling pubmed-39775212014-04-10 Prevalence of Root Dilaceration in Adult Patients Referred to Shiraz Dental School (2005-2010) Nabavizadeh, MR Sedigh Shamsi, M Moazami, F Abbaszadegan, A J Dent (Shiraz) Original Article Statement of Problem: Dilaceration is defined as a sudden change in the axial inclination of root or between the crown and the root of a tooth. There is no previous study evaluating its prevalence in south of Iran. Purpose: This study evaluates the prevalence of root dilaceration on the basis of its location in dental arch in a sample of dental patients referring to Shiraz dental school, Iran. Materials and Method: This retrospective study was performed using full mouth periapical radiographs of 250 patients who were referred to Shiraz dental school. Buccal and lingual dilaceration was determined by its known” bull’s eye” appearance in the radiographs or if the deviation was in the mesial or distal directions; the angle of 90 degree or greater between the deviation and the axis of root was the inclusion criteria. Results: Root dilaceration was detected in 0.3% of teeth and 7.2% of patients. It was distributed equally between the maxilla and mandible. Mandibular second molar was the most frequent dilacerated tooth (1.6%) followed by maxillary first molar (1.3%) and mandibular first molar (0.6%). The alveolar nerve was the most common anatomic structure near dilacerated teeth. Conclusion: According to this study, root dilaceration is an uncommon developmental anomaly which occurs mostly in the posterior teeth. Shiraz University of Medical Sciences 2013-12 /pmc/articles/PMC3977521/ /pubmed/24724139 Text en © 2013: Journal of dentistry (Shiraz) This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/) which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Nabavizadeh, MR
Sedigh Shamsi, M
Moazami, F
Abbaszadegan, A
Prevalence of Root Dilaceration in Adult Patients Referred to Shiraz Dental School (2005-2010)
title Prevalence of Root Dilaceration in Adult Patients Referred to Shiraz Dental School (2005-2010)
title_full Prevalence of Root Dilaceration in Adult Patients Referred to Shiraz Dental School (2005-2010)
title_fullStr Prevalence of Root Dilaceration in Adult Patients Referred to Shiraz Dental School (2005-2010)
title_full_unstemmed Prevalence of Root Dilaceration in Adult Patients Referred to Shiraz Dental School (2005-2010)
title_short Prevalence of Root Dilaceration in Adult Patients Referred to Shiraz Dental School (2005-2010)
title_sort prevalence of root dilaceration in adult patients referred to shiraz dental school (2005-2010)
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3977521/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24724139
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