Enamel Flashcards

1
Q

What is enamel made of

A

Hydroxyapatite crystals 95%
Water 4%
Proteins 1%

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2
Q

Shape of enamel prism?

A

Keyhole shaped

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3
Q

Physical characteristics of enamel

A
  • thickest at the incisal edge and thinnest at the cervical margin
    -hardest tissue in the body , resists abrasion
  • brittle
  • Highly mineralised
  • cannot be repaired or replaced
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4
Q

Surface enamel vs subsurface enamel

A

Surface enamel is thicker, less porous and harder, denser
Surface enamel contains more fluoride ions but less magnitude/ carbonate ions

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5
Q

Why does translucency of enamel increase with age?

A

Less internal reflection, dentine shows through, demineralisation

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6
Q

Principal mineral component of enamel ?

A

Calcium hydroxyapatite

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7
Q

What is the cell that forms organic template of enamel?

A

Ameloblast

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8
Q

Basic structural unit of enamel

A

Enamel prism or rod

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9
Q

What is the difference between attrition and abrasion?

A

Attrition is tooth loss involving tooth to tooth contact eg. Bruxism

Abrasion is tooth loss involving friction between tooth and outside material eg. Over brushing or use of abrasive toothpaste

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10
Q

Differences between dentine and enamel crystals

A

Dentine crystals are smaller
Scallop structure at the dentine-enamel junction

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11
Q

Why does fluoride help

A

Fluoride ions replace OH ions to form fluroroapatite which is more stable than hydroxyapatite

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12
Q

Why is enamel able to withstand the shearing forces even though it is brittle?

A

It is supported by dentine. Never leave enamel unsupported after any procedure, consultant will fail you

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13
Q

Where are teeth formed from?

A

Tooth bud

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14
Q

What does ameloblasts secrete

A

-secrete an organic matrix comprised primarily of several enamel proteins including amelogenin (90%) ameloblastin (5%) and enamelin. This matrix then undergoes mineralisation

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15
Q

Some histological slides do not have enamel shown, why?

A

Enamel is mainly composed of mineral, ie hydroxyapatite. Some slides are Demineralised specimens so the entire enamel is not shown on the slide.

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16
Q

How to differentiate between dentine and enamel on a slide?

A
  1. Striae of retzius (oblique striations in enamel)
  2. Cross striations (little lines in each enamel rod)
  3. Pointy bit of the scallop faces enamel
  4. Space between dentinal tubules are larger than spacing between enamel rods at ADJ
17
Q

Is enamel brown?

A

No, enamel is translucent. It appears brown on the slide because of the light and sectioning

18
Q

Abfraction

A

When the ADJ fractures and the enamel pops out

19
Q

What is the characteristic of enamel at the fissures

A

It is thinner, the enamel rods

20
Q

What are ground sections

A

Hard Mineralised tissues remain intact

21
Q

How does enamel differ from all other calcified tissues in the body

A

It does not have cells within it or on its surface

22
Q

Where is enamel the thinnest?

A

Cervical margin. Rmb that there is no enamel at the apex

23
Q

Does the mineral content increase or decrease from the ADJ to the surface

A

Increases

24
Q

What are so common ions that are present in enamel

A

Fluoride magnesium carbonate

25
Q

Two main types of incremental lines in enamel

A

Cross striations and Striae of Retzius

26
Q

Dentine is more vulnerable at this site.

A

Enamel is thinner at the fissure so caries more likely at fissures

27
Q

Enamel rod direction

A

The rod direction in the crown is normally perpendicular to the incisal surface

28
Q

Four enamel proteins

A

Amelogenins, ameloblastins,enamelins, tuftelins

29
Q

Does enamel contain collagen

A

No

30
Q

Tomes processes

A

Right angle deposition ?