Quiz 5 Flashcards

1
Q

Permanent Maxillary Molar Overview

A

Largest and strongest of the maxillary teeth (size including a broad base and root trunk; anchorage into the jaw- 3 full sized roots with considerable spread); generally they have 4 well formed cusps; the lingual root is the largest of the 3 roots- other 2 are buccal roots; perm. 1st usually emerge at 6 yrs with mandibular preceeding maxillary; NOT succedaneous teeth; space is created for these teeth due to the downward and outward growth of the bones of the face; normal position of the 1st molar is at center of adult jaw anteroposteriorly; 1st molars are sometimes referred to as cornerstones of dental arch

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2
Q

Permanent Maxillary 1st molar overview

A

Is wider BL than MD; even though the crown is somewhat short, the other measurements provide a large occlusal surface (it is the largest tooth in the max. arch) 4 well developed functioning cusps, one supplemental cusp of little use ( MB,DB, ML, DL, cusp of carabelli [cusp could be well-developed or down to grooves or pits, trait can be used to distinguish populations; located lingual to the ML cusp, Cusp or remnants can be used to identify the 1st molar]) ; roots:MB, DB, L usually well separated giving tooth a strong anchorage to jaw; L root is longest, tapered and rounded, MB root is shorter but has a broad dimension BLingually giving greater resistance to rotation or torsion forces; DB root is the smallest and roundest

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3
Q

Permanent Maxillary 1st Molar Buccal Aspect

A

Shape is trapezoid; D side can bee seen from B side if sight in at B groove; DB line angle is obtuse; can see parts of 4 cusps; MB cusp is broader than DB, cusp slopes meet at obtuse angle; cusp slopes of DB cusp meet at about right angle; B developmental groove divides the 2 cusps which ends with a slight dip; cervical line (little curvature, though not smooth or regular; may have convexity toward the root); M outline is straight downward and M curving occlusally at contact area (crest or contact area is 2/3 distance cervical line to tip of cusp); D outline is convex, distal surface is spheroid; crest of curvature is half distance from cervical line to cusp tip; contact area is in middle of middle 3rd; may be a flat or concave area on distal surface above DB cusp; all 3 roots are visible with incline to D; MB root curves distally at middle 3rd; D root is straighter; point of bifurcation is about 4 mm above the cervical line (farther than deciduous molars); deep developmental groove starts on root trunk at bifurcation and goes downward becoming more shallow and ends at cervical line; the common root base is called the root trunk; root usually avg. about twice the length of the crown

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4
Q

Permanent Maxillary 1st Molar Lingual Aspect

A

Outline is the reverse of the B at the M and D; outline of the D blends with the roundness of the DL cusp in a close to perfect semicircle; the line of the L developmental groove is confluent with the outline of the DL cusp as well; the L groove goes M and cervical to about the center of the crown; only the L cusps can be seen from the L; ML cusp the the widest and longest before wear; outline of the M of the crown forms almost a right angle with the ML cusp; ML cusp ridges form an acute angle; DL cusp is round with no angle showing; when the 5th cusp is well developed, the cusp angle is less obtuse and sharper than the ML cusp; L root is conical with a bluntly rounded apex

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5
Q

Permanent Maxillary 1st Molar Mesial Aspect

A

One can see the increase in the BL dimension and the cervical curve outlines (buccally cervical line is a short arc to the B to crest at cervical 3rd; there is a shallow concavity just occlusal to crest; from there it is a slight convexity to the tip of the cusp) lingual outline of the crown ( crest of curvature is in the middle 3rd; if a 5th cusp is present, there will be a dip inward in the outline- if not, it’s smooth curve; point of cusp is more centered in the root base than are the B cusps with the cusp in line with the long axis of the L root) MMR is irregular, curves cervically, centered with crown buccolingually (curve of cervical line is not more than 1mm- centered above the contact area); M contact area is closer to the marginal ridge than to the cervical line at junction of the middle and occlusal 3rd, and B to center BL; MB root (broad and flattened on the M surface often with flutings partway, width near the crown is about 2/3 the width of the crown; extends upward and outward with blunt apex, extension does not extend past the extension of the crown; bifurcation is closer to the cervical line than that on the B) there is a smooth depression going from the bifurcation onto root base ending just above the cervical line and above the ML line angle of the crown; L root is longer than the MB root, and narrower

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6
Q

Permanent Maxillary 1st Molar Distal Aspect

A

Variations from M: will see most of the B surface due to distal taper; BL measurement is greater at the M than the D due to the slant of the B surface; DMR dips more sharply to cervical than does M (exposes the triangular ridges); cervical line is most straight across; D surface is more convex except a small area at DB root at cervix which concavity extends onto DB root; DB root is narrowest of the 3 at its base- this root is S shaped going inward then outward to a rounded apex

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7
Q

Permanent Maxillary 1st Molar Occlusal Aspect

A

Somewhat rhomboidal especially when following the outline of the 4 major cusps and the marginal ridges, BL measurement is greater at the M, MD measurement is greater just lingual to contact areas than that just B to contact areas; crown is wider M than D and L than B; 4 well developed major cusps; size in order of cusps: ML, MB, DL, DB, 5th cusp; acute angles (MB, DL), obtuse angles (ML, DB); primary cusps- ML and 2 B cusps form the Max. molar primary cusp triangle (outline of 3 cusps, MMR, oblique ridge [made from the union of the triangular ridge of the DB cusp and the D ridge of the ML cusp. It crosses the occlusal surface obliquely]); central fossa and distal fossa are the major fossa; minor fossa are the M and D triangular fossa; oblique ridge crosses the occlusal surface diagonally (loses height at center of the occlusal surface same level as marginal ridges; sometimes has a developmental groove crossing it) central fossa is concave and usually has a central pit with sulcate grooves radiating (also has a B developmental groove extending onto the B; has a central developmental groove going M ending in the M triangular fossa-joined by supplemental grooves from cusp) M triangular fossa- base is marginal ridge, apex is at point where supplemental grooves join the central groove; transverse groove of the oblique ridge goes over the oblique ridge when one is there; groove that outlines 5th cusp is called the 5th cusp groove; D oblique groove has several supplemental grooves; may be a slight concavity in the DMR; DL cusp is smooth, rounded from the concavity, cusp ridge extends farther L than the ML cusp

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8
Q

Permanent Maxillary 2nd Molar Overview

A

roots are as long as, and sometimes longer than the 1st molar; DB cusp is not as large as or as well developed than the 1st; DL cusp is smaller; no 5th cusp; crown is about 0.5 mm shorter from cervical to occlusal; measurement BL is about the same; occlusal shape may be similar to 1st molar or it may resemble a 3rd molar; with a poorly developed DL cusp, the other 3 will be more prominent; this give the tooth a heart shape

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9
Q

Permanent Maxillary 2nd Molar Buccal Aspect

A

Crown is shorter and narrower than first; DB cusp is smaller with some of the DMR exposed

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10
Q

Permanent Maxillary 2nd Molar Lingual Aspect

A

Differs from 1st: DL cusp is smaller; DB cusp may be seen through the area between the ML and DL cusps; No 5th cusp is evident; apex of lingual root is in line with DL cusp tip, not with the L groove as 1st milar

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11
Q

Permanent Maxillary 2nd Molar Mesial Aspect

A

roots are not as spread, and are within the confines of the crown outline

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12
Q

Permanent Maxillary 2nd Molar Distal Aspect

A

D can see some of the MB cusp due to smaller DB cusp

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13
Q

Permanent Maxillary 2nd Molar Occlusal Aspect

A

MB and ML cusps are as large and well developed as the 1st; DB and DL cusps are smaller and less developed; usually find more supplemental grooves, other grooves and pits than first molar

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14
Q

Permanent Maxillary 3rd Molar Overview

A

Less well developed; usually resemble the 2nd; crown is smaller, roots are shorter, and sometimes fused; will show a lot of variations with some resembling none other

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15
Q

Permanent Maxillary 3rd Molar Buccal Aspect

A

crown is shorter and narrower MD; roots are usually fused so that it looks like a single root, ending in taper at apex

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16
Q

Permanent Maxillary 3nd Molar Lingual Aspect

A

Only one large L cusp with no L groove; some may have a poorly developed DL cusp with a developmental groove

17
Q

Permanent Maxillary 3nd Molar Mesial Aspect

A

Taper of the fused root is evident, may have a bifurcation at apical 3rd

18
Q

Permanent Maxillary 3nd Molar Distal Aspect

A

Can see more of the occlusal surface than 2nd due to angulation of crown to root

19
Q

Permanent Maxillary 3nd Molar Occlusal Aspect

A

usually will be heart shaped; L cusp is large, well developed; DL cusp is small or not seen; functioning cusps are 2 B and 1 lingual; may see many supplemental grooves and accidental grooves there is a lot of wear; some may show 4 distinct cusps with oblique ridge, central D fossa and L developmental groove; most converge more L losing its rhomboid shape