Clarification of Equine Dental Nomenclature
نویسندگان
چکیده
منابع مشابه
Peer-assisted learning: time for nomenclature clarification
BACKGROUND Peer-assisted learning (PAL) is used throughout all levels of healthcare education. Lack of formalised agreement on different PAL programmes may confuse the literature. Given the increasing interest in PAL as an education philosophy, the terms need clarification. The aim of this review is to 1) describe different PAL programmes, 2) clarify the terminology surrounding PAL, and 3) prop...
متن کاملEquine Dental Developmental Abnormalities
Abnormalities of dental development and eruption occur quite commonly in the horse and result in a wide range of clinical conditions. A congenital/developmental problem present at the time of tooth eruption often leads to acquired dental problems as the teeth continue to erupt and wear. Consequently, several different dental abnormalities whose pathogenesis may be inter-related, are often prese...
متن کاملEquine Dental Disease
Equine dental developmental abnormalities can involve tooth number, morphology, or position in the dental arcades. Abnormalities of dental development and eruption occur quite commonly in the horse and result in a wide range of clinical conditions. Some developmental dental abnormalities of a young horse may not cause the animal to exhibit clinical signs of dental disease until it reaches middl...
متن کاملEquine Dental Pathology
Equine dental pathology frequently goes undiagnosed. The reasons for this range from a lack of knowledge and appropriate instrumentation to the common dislike many practitioners have for equine dentistry. Dental pathology, however, is very common as shown in multiple cadaver head studies. Pathologic findings include 60% with periodontal disease and 79% with infindibular caries over age 15; 12.9...
متن کاملEquine Dental Anatomy and Physiology of Mastication
Dental disease and its prevention and treatment comprises approximately 10% of the general equine practitioner’s work. The most common disease affecting the equine hypsodont teeth is the development of dental overgrowths. Brachydont dentition (canines and wolf teeth) are less often diagnosed with dental disease. Gingivitis and periodontal disease as seen in many young horses can affect any toot...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: The Anatomical Record
سال: 2015
ISSN: 1932-8486
DOI: 10.1002/ar.23199