Anthropological Science (Japanese Series)
Online ISSN : 1348-8813
Print ISSN : 1344-3992
ISSN-L : 1344-3992
Original Article
Deciduous canine morphology in recent Japanese
Hiroyuki YamadaYutaka KunimatsuYuzuru Hamada
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JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

2016 Volume 124 Issue 2 Pages 73-84

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Abstract

We aimed to describe crown morphology of deciduous canines in modern Japanese people. The materials used in this study were extracted deciduous teeth from Japanese individuals comprising 46 children of which sex was already known. The observations have been made by plaster casts taken from the extracted teeth. Parameters for measurements were mesiodistal and labiolingual crown diameters, labiolingual root diameter, enamel bulge of cervical portion, crown height, mesial shoulder height, and CMSD (Cusp to Mesial Shoulder Distance). They were measured with digimatic sliding calipers with an accuracy of 0.01 mm. The deciduous canines were generally quite similar in morphology and size between male and female. Viewed from the lingual aspect, marginal ridges and basal tubercle of the upper deciduous canines were observed more frequently than those of the permanent canines. On the other hand, the spine and distal accessary ridge of the upper deciduous canines appeared less frequently when compared with the permanent canines. In the lower canines, ridges and grooves were weekly represented in phenotype as a whole. Odontometrically, the crown size was larger in females than in males. However, the sexual dimorphism was significant for only the mesiodistal and labiolingual crown diameters of the upper deciduous canines. The three indices of crown proportion did not differ significantly between the two sexes. Compared with the permanent canines, the deciduous canines were characterized as follows: 1) the crown index was smaller than 100, showing that the crown outline was elongated in mesiodistal direction in incisal view, 2) the enamel bulge of the cervical portion was relatively significantly thicker, 3) the mesial shoulder was located more closely to the cervical portion in the upper and lower deciduous canines.

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© 2016 The Anthropological Society of Nippon
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