Quantification of the dental morphology of orangutans

Orangutans are believed to have close biological affinities to humans. Teeth being the hardest tissue provide useful information on primate evolution. Furthermore, knowledge of the pulp chamber and root canal morphology is important for dental treatment. A female Bornean orangutan and a Sumatran mal...

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Published in:The Scientific World Journal
Main Author: Nambiar P.; John J.; Al-Amery S.M.; Purmal K.; Chai W.L.; Ngeow W.C.; Mohamed N.H.; Vellayan S.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Publishing Corporation 2013
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84890026196&doi=10.1155%2f2013%2f213757&partnerID=40&md5=d99fd30030096ea06a24a4875a5b5064
id 2-s2.0-84890026196
spelling 2-s2.0-84890026196
Nambiar P.; John J.; Al-Amery S.M.; Purmal K.; Chai W.L.; Ngeow W.C.; Mohamed N.H.; Vellayan S.
Quantification of the dental morphology of orangutans
2013
The Scientific World Journal
2013

10.1155/2013/213757
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84890026196&doi=10.1155%2f2013%2f213757&partnerID=40&md5=d99fd30030096ea06a24a4875a5b5064
Orangutans are believed to have close biological affinities to humans. Teeth being the hardest tissue provide useful information on primate evolution. Furthermore, knowledge of the pulp chamber and root canal morphology is important for dental treatment. A female Bornean orangutan and a Sumatran male orangutan skull were available for this study. Both of their dentitions, comprising 50 teeth, were scanned employing the cone-beam computed tomography for both metrical and nonmetrical analyses. Measurements included tooth and crown length, root length, enamel covered crown height, root canal length (posterior teeth), length of pulpal space (anterior teeth), and root canal width. Nonmetrical parameters included number of canals per root, number of foramina in each root, and root canal morphology according to Vertucci's classification. It was found that the enamel covered crown height was the longest in the upper central incisors although the canine was the longest amongst the anterior teeth. Both the upper premolars were three-rooted while the lower second premolar of the Sumatran orangutan was two-rooted, with two foramina. The mandibular lateral incisors of the Bornean orangutan were longer than the central incisors, a feature similar to humans. In addition, secondary dentine deposition was noticed, a feature consistent with aged humans. © 2013 P. Nambiar et al.
Hindawi Publishing Corporation
1537744X
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Nambiar P.; John J.; Al-Amery S.M.; Purmal K.; Chai W.L.; Ngeow W.C.; Mohamed N.H.; Vellayan S.
spellingShingle Nambiar P.; John J.; Al-Amery S.M.; Purmal K.; Chai W.L.; Ngeow W.C.; Mohamed N.H.; Vellayan S.
Quantification of the dental morphology of orangutans
author_facet Nambiar P.; John J.; Al-Amery S.M.; Purmal K.; Chai W.L.; Ngeow W.C.; Mohamed N.H.; Vellayan S.
author_sort Nambiar P.; John J.; Al-Amery S.M.; Purmal K.; Chai W.L.; Ngeow W.C.; Mohamed N.H.; Vellayan S.
title Quantification of the dental morphology of orangutans
title_short Quantification of the dental morphology of orangutans
title_full Quantification of the dental morphology of orangutans
title_fullStr Quantification of the dental morphology of orangutans
title_full_unstemmed Quantification of the dental morphology of orangutans
title_sort Quantification of the dental morphology of orangutans
publishDate 2013
container_title The Scientific World Journal
container_volume 2013
container_issue
doi_str_mv 10.1155/2013/213757
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84890026196&doi=10.1155%2f2013%2f213757&partnerID=40&md5=d99fd30030096ea06a24a4875a5b5064
description Orangutans are believed to have close biological affinities to humans. Teeth being the hardest tissue provide useful information on primate evolution. Furthermore, knowledge of the pulp chamber and root canal morphology is important for dental treatment. A female Bornean orangutan and a Sumatran male orangutan skull were available for this study. Both of their dentitions, comprising 50 teeth, were scanned employing the cone-beam computed tomography for both metrical and nonmetrical analyses. Measurements included tooth and crown length, root length, enamel covered crown height, root canal length (posterior teeth), length of pulpal space (anterior teeth), and root canal width. Nonmetrical parameters included number of canals per root, number of foramina in each root, and root canal morphology according to Vertucci's classification. It was found that the enamel covered crown height was the longest in the upper central incisors although the canine was the longest amongst the anterior teeth. Both the upper premolars were three-rooted while the lower second premolar of the Sumatran orangutan was two-rooted, with two foramina. The mandibular lateral incisors of the Bornean orangutan were longer than the central incisors, a feature similar to humans. In addition, secondary dentine deposition was noticed, a feature consistent with aged humans. © 2013 P. Nambiar et al.
publisher Hindawi Publishing Corporation
issn 1537744X
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
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