Panoramic radiographs from 1026 patients were examined for the presence of completely impacted teeth. The prevalence of completely impacted teeth in the edentulous jaw was lower than that in the dentate jaw in both the upper and lower jaws. The prevalence of completely impacted third molars in the edentulous jaw was also lower than that in the dentate jaw.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCleft Palate Craniofac J
May 1996
The levator veli palatini muscle is innervated by motoneurons of the glossopharyngeal nerve, which are located within the ambiguus nucleus; however, little is known about the afferent fibers of this muscle. A horseradish peroxidase study was conducted in rats following injection into the levator veli palatini muscle branch to reveal the location and the distribution of dendrites of the afferent fibers of the muscle. Terminal labels were densely distributed in the lateral region of the solitary nucleus, which receives afferents of the glossopharyngeal nerve, ipsilateral and contralateral to the injection site.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOral Surg Oral Med Oral Pathol Oral Radiol Endod
December 1995
Objective: The purpose was to determine the features of mandibular lingual cortical bone loss around the root of the mandibular third molar.
Study Design: We examined occlusal radiographs in 2210 persons aged 11 to 78 years.
Results: Prominent increase of incidence of bone loss was evident in subjects in their third decade compared with those in their second decade.
Oral Surg Oral Med Oral Pathol Oral Radiol Endod
September 1995
Panoramic radiographs of 1834 patients older than 21 years were evaluated for the prevalence of impacted teeth at different ages. The frequency of impacted teeth by age was constant, that is, the presence of completely impacted teeth could not be related to age. The interrelationship between the angulation of impacted teeth and the existence of adjacent teeth was studied in individuals older than 61 years.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAust Dent J
February 1995
A case involving the presence of supernumerary cuspids and bicuspids is described. The condition was probably an inherited one because of the family history and the bilateral incidence. The supernumerary teeth erupted because of alveolar resorption in which inflammatory factors probably played a role.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHorseradish peroxidase conjugated to wheatgerm agglutinin (HRP:WGA) was injected into the proximal cut ends of three branches of the mylohyoid nerve in rats: the branch to the mylohyoid muscle (BrMh), the branch to the anterior belly of the digastricus muscle (BrDg), and the cutaneous branch (BrCu). HRP-labeled cells were detected in the ipsilateral caudal portion of the trigeminal mesencephalic nucleus (Vmes) and the ipsilateral ventromedial division of the trigeminal motor nucleus, except when HRP:WGA was applied to the BrCu. Morphologically, all labeled Vmes cells were of the pseudounipolar type.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA case presenting radiographic appearance of a fracture line associated with emphysema which occurred in the removal of a mandibular third molar is reported. The cause of the fracture line in the radiograph is discussed together with the benefit of CT in diagnosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGas bubbles are one of the important signs in the clinical diagnosis of necrotizing fasciitis, and radiographs are mandatory. An instance where gas bubbles not found on the plain radiographs were clearly shown by CT, which is a useful method for close monitoring and decompression of gas bubbles situated deeply in the spaces of the maxillo-facial and neck regions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCleft Palate Craniofac J
May 1994
The responsiveness of receptors supplying the oral mucosa to air pressures generated during consonant production was investigated to obtain information about hypothetical mechanisms underlying speech deficits. The delay between the onset of the neural discharge and the pop puff of phonation (mouth-exist pressure) for /pa/ production was significantly shorter and less variable than it was for /ta/ and /ka/ production, suggesting that the discharge is more closely coupled to the onset of /pa/ production. The data were interpreted to imply that single fibers of the infraorbital nerve respond to the build-up of oral air pressure during /pa/ production.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA survey was carried out to clarify the incidence of sagittal splitting fracture of the mandibular condyle using computerized tomography. There were 33 patients, between 11 and 67 years of age, with displaced or dislocated mandibular condylar process fractures (41 cases), seen at our clinic between 1986 and 1992. The incidence of no displacement was 4.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBr J Oral Maxillofac Surg
April 1994
We investigated the mechanism involved in paraesthesia associated with sagittal split mandibular ramus osteotomy by three-dimensional computed tomography (3-D CT). Ten female patients underwent this procedure between 1988 and 1991. The inferior alveolar neuro-vascular bundles remained intact during the sagittal osteotomy in all cases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAfferent discharges of the mylohyoid muscle branch during respiration were studied electrophysiologically in the rat. Afferent discharges from the mylohyoid muscle branch of the mylohyoid nerve were found to be synchronized with respiration. Stretching of the mylohyoid muscle elicited afferent discharges of the mylohyoid muscle branch, suggesting that lengthening of the mylohyoid muscle caused electrical activity in the proprioceptors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCleft Palate Craniofac J
March 1993
Bone grafting of a midline cleft is required to allow reasonable masticatory function. However, changes in the rhythm of mastication have not been investigated before and after such bone grafting procedures. We performed bone grafting in a patient with multiple craniofacial anomalies including a midline mandibular cleft.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe 2-Trimethylsilylethyl (TSE) group was found to be useful as a protecting group for the internucleotidic phosphate in DNA synthesis. Oligodeoxyribonucleotides were synthesized in good yields by using phosphoramidite building blocks having the TSE group. In RNA synthesis, 2-trimethylsilylethoxymethyl (SEM) group was introduced as a new protecting group for the 2'-hydroxyl.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSomatosens Mot Res
December 1993
Evoked neural responses to tactile stimulation were recorded electrophysiologically from the mechanoreceptive afferent fibers innervating the buccal and submandibular regions of Wistar rats anesthetized with sodium thiopental. Miniature probes 200 microns in diameter were used, and data analysis was performed on the mechanosensitivity of responses to tactile stimulation in the areas innervated by the mental, mylohyoid, auriculotemporal, and cervical nerves. Mechano-sensitivity of each area showed a characteristic distribution of slowly adapting (SA), rapidly adapting (RA), C-fiber (CF), and hair follicle (HF) units in individual receptive fields.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe mylohyoid muscle has several functions in relation to respiration, deglutition, and phonation, but these functions are not fully understood. The interaction of the mylohyoid nerve and muscle in 25 rats was studied by neurophysiologic and histologic methods. Stretching of the muscle elicited electrical responses from the branch of the mylohyoid nerve innervating the mylohyoid muscle, and stretch-sensitive receptors were demonstrated histologically in the mylohyoid muscle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAirflow receptor afferents in the oral mucosa responding to changes in intraoral air pressure during blowing were found to be innervated by the infraorbital nerve. They provided one response corresponding to the onset of blowing, a second related to an increase in air pressure, a third corresponding to the cessation of blowing, and a fourth that exhibited little change throughout sustained blowing. Intraoral air pressure in the cavity between the lips and the velopharyngeal portal may be monitored by these receptors, and the data they provide may contribute to the control of phonation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCleft Palate Craniofac J
May 1992
We previously reported that the levator veli palatini muscle (LVP) in the rat is innervated by the glossopharyngeal nerve. The LVP positioned between the mouth and nasopharynx, has important roles in respiration, swallowing, and speech. Muscle spindles, structures scattered through skeletal muscles, appear to function like miniature strain gauges, sensing the degree of tension in the muscle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) has been demonstrated to be a versatile "affinity handle" for expression of recombinant proteins. The DHFR "handle" has advantages not only in terms of efficiency of expressing the fusion protein as a soluble form but also in stabilizing unstable polypeptides and facilitating purification of the expressed protein by means of methotrexate-bound affinity chromatography and by making use of the enzyme activity. Fifteen genes encoding different lengths of polypeptides of 5 to 44 amino acids were chemically synthesized and introduced into expression vectors, pTP70-1 or its derivatives.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Res Bull
January 1992
We investigated the effects of various stimuli on the afferent and efferent branches of the glossopharyngeal nerve in the rat soft palate. One of the sensory components, the lingual branch, responded to tactile stimulation, while the LVP branch responded to stretching of the levator veli palatini muscle. We also obtained physiological and morphological evidence of the existence of muscle spindles in the levator veli palatini muscle and showed that tactile stimulation of the contralateral soft palate and stretching of the contralateral LVP modulated discharges from the motor component of the ipsilateral levator veli palatini muscle.
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