ENGLISH WORK
GLOSSARY
ENGLISH WORK
GLOSSARY
ENGLISH WORK
GLOSSARY
ENGLISH WORK
GLOSSARY
References
- Oxford University Press. (2019). The Oxford Dictionary of Dentistry. Oxford Reference. https://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780198604764.001.0001/acref-9780198604764
- Oxford University Press. (2019). The Oxford Dictionary of Dentistry. Oxford Reference. Retrieved from https://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780198604764.001.0001/acref-9780198604764
- 3. Oxford University Press. (2019). The Oxford Dictionary of Dentistry. Oxford Reference. [Online]. Available at: https://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780198604764.001.0001/acref-9780198604764 (Accessed: 12 January 2022)
Bicuspids/premolars: The teeth with two rounded tips that sit between the fangs (cusps) and the molars. Bruxism: Involuntary grinding or clenching of the teeth. Bone graft: Replacing bone that is missing in a certain area of the maxilla or mandible. This can be animal, human or biocompatible synthetic compounds. Bacterial plaque: Soft and sticky substance that accumulates on the teeth, composed mainly of bacteria and bacterial derivatives. Bridges Fixed: tooth replacements, which are attached to adjacent natural teeth when one or more teeth are missing.
Sealant Fissure: Special composite resin for closing grooves and fissures in children's teeth to prevent future cavities.Sialorrhea: Exaggerated secretion of saliva. Sjogren's syndrome: An autoimmune disorder (mainly affecting older women) characterized by partial or total cessation of salivary and tear flow. Section: Portion of a maxillofacial prosthesis that serves to fill a defect as part of a prosthesis. Suture: A surgical stitch used to repair cuts or wounds. Salivary glands: Helps with nutrition and keep the mouth clean and healty. Saliva: Transparent liquid made up of 99% water and 1% others that protect the oral cavity. Scalpel: Used for surgical prcedures Sealant: It treatment serves to protect theeth from caries. Sensitivity: Acute dental pain caused by exposure dentin and stimuli.
Implant: Is a procedure that replaces the roots of the teeth with screw-like metal posts and replaces the missing or damaged tooth with an artificial tooth that looks the same and performs the same function as real teeth.Incisors: Inner Layer: Infection: Inflammation: Intra oral: Intra oral mirror: intra venous: Isolate:
The four front teeth in both the upper and lower jaws are called incisors. Their primary function is to cut food.
Is the innermost and softest layer of teeth.
Condition in which bacteria or viruses that cause disease have entered the body.
Is when your immune system sends out cells to fight bacteria or heal an injury.
Is when occurring, or performed within the mouth. How to use intraoral in a sentence.
Used to view tooth faces that are not reached naturally
Medical technique that administers fluids
Used to avoid contamination of the area to be worked
Wear: The normal deterioration of the tooth surface as a result of chewing.
Width Third definitive molar. Wisdom tooth.Waiting room: Space were you wait for your turn.Wisdom Tooth: Wisdom tooth that is completely inside the bone.
Wax: Protect the patient's mouth during their orthodontic treatment.
Hemisection: Excision of the root of a tooth, when the amputation is performed on two roots of a biradicular tooth, it is called hemisection.Heparin: It is a natural substance, present in all vertebrates. Found particularly in the liver, lung and intestine of mammals. There is no circulating heparin under normal conditions and its equivalent would be heparan sulfate (a heparinoid) which would be found in the endothelium, in contact with the blood and would contribute to the non-thrombogenicity of the endothelium. Herpes simplex virus: Virus that causes blisters to develop in the mouth or around the eyes and can be transmitted to the genital area. The latent virus can be reactivated by stress, trauma, other infections, or suppression of the immune system.
Cyst: Pathological cavity, generally lined by epithelium, containing liquid or soft matter. Calibration: This is one of the most important tasks in Digital Dentistry, since we need the appliances to work in the same way over time, to achieve optimal results. It consists of a comparison between measurements, one of known value or certainty based on a device different from the one we want to calibrate, or from a part of the same device. Cavities: Dental deterioration that can cause cavities. Cariogenic: That promotes the development of dental cavities. Cavity: Popular expression that defines dental caries. It also defines in dental medicine terms the hole that results from the removal of a cavity. Cementum: Hard connective tissue that covers the root of the tooth. Central/lateral: The four front teeth
Veneer: A plastic or porcelain covering placed on the front surface of the tooth or crown to achieve a natural appearance. Viruses: Infectious agents of very small size (200 to 300 nm) that require the synthetic machinery of the cells they parasitize to replicate.
Denture: Set of all teeth. There are a total of 32 pieces distributed in: 8 incisors, 4 canines, 8 premolars and 12 molars. Dentition: The teeth in the dental arch. Dentin: The part of the tooth that is beneath the enamel and cementum. Dentures: Removable dental prosthesis on a plastic base that rests directly on the gums. A denture can be complete or partial depending on the number of natural teeth missing. Dental Prosthesis: Artificial appliance that replaces one or more missing teeth. Dental pulp: The blood vessels and nerve tissue within the tooth.
Neck: the part of aperson's or animal's body connecting the head to the rest of the body. Nerve/s: the nervous system is the highly complex part of an animal that coordinates its actions and sensory information. Needle/s: A small slender usually steel instrument designed to carry sutures when sewing tissues in surgery.
Keratinized Gingiva: The outer layer of gum tissue that is tough and provides a protective barrier around the teeth. Ketorolac: An analgesic used post-dental procedures. Keratocyst: Cystic tumor whose capsule is formed by a squamous epithelium derived from the dental lamina or the primordial odontogenic epithelium.
Mouth cleaning: Action with an ultrasound device to remove tartar and dirt from the teeth. Malignant: Presenting dysplasia, invasion and metastasis. Malocclusion: Incorrect position of the biting or chewing surfaces of the upper and lower teeth.
Malposition: of the biting or chewing surfaces of the upper and lower teeth.
Mouth Guard Device that is placed over the teeth to prevent injuries to the teeth, mouth or lips. Mandible: Common name for the lower jaw.
Maxilla Upper jaw. Molar Teeth: posterior to the premolars (bicuspids) on both sides of the jaws; grinding teeth that have wide crowns and wide chewing surfaces.
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Periodontitis: Inflammation and loss of connective tissue of the supporting structure or that surrounding the teeth with loss of adhesion. Post-stump: A support placed on the root of the tooth after a root canal has been performed, to strengthen the tooth and help keep the crown (dunda) in place. Post: A custom-made, elongated projecting piece that is cemented into the preparation in a root canal; It serves to retain a restorative material and/or a crown. Palate: The hard and soft tissues that form the roof of the mouth and separate the oral cavity from the nasal cavity. Root Canal: The part of the pulp cavity that is located within the root of the tooth; the chamber inside the root of the tooth that contains the pulp.
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Halitosis: Is the clinical term for bad breath. Food breakdown typically causes foul-smelling breath, though other culprits include dry mouth, poor dental hygiene and infection. Using tobacco or dieting can also cause bad breath, as can having certain diseases. Persistent bad taste in the mouth or bad breath might be an indication of periodontal disease. Hypersensitivity: Typically refers to tooth pain that is caused very easily and with a stimulus that normally would elicit no feeling. Hemisection: Surgical separation of a multi-rooted tooth.
Amalgam: A silver filling. Amalgam fillings, used for more than a century, have been proven to be safe, affordable, and long-lasting. Alveolar bone: The part of the jaw that surrounds the roots of the teeth. Abutment Tooth: (or implant) that supports a dental prosthesis. Alveolar process: The curved part of the jaw where the roots of the teeth are housed. Adhesive restoration: A technique for bonding a filling or filling material to a tooth. Bonding materials can be used to repair chipped, broken, misshapen or discolored teeth, or to fill a gap between teeth.
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Gum: Soft pink tissue that covers the jaw.
Gingiva: Soft tissues that cover the crowns of unerupted teeth and surround the necks of those that have erupted. Gingivectomy: The excision or removal of the gum. Gingivitis: Inflammation of the gingival tissues without loss of connective tissue, caused by the accumulation of plaque or food particles. Gingivoplasty: Surgical procedure to remodel the gum. Gingival Hyperplasia: Overgrowth of gingival tissues. Guided Tissue Regeneration (GTR): Procedure during flap surgery for periodontal disease in which a membrane is inserted between the alveolar bone and the bone graft to stimulate the growth of gum tissues on the alveolar bone.
Laminate Veneer:
A thin layer of plastic or porcelain that covers a front tooth to restore, strengthen, or improve its appearance.Limited Oral: Evaluation limited to a specific oral health problem. Labial: Pertaining to the lip or around the lip.
Leukoplakia: A lesion characterized by whitish, flat or slightly raised spots, with a rough feel, that develops on the mucous membranes
Lingual Of or about the language; tooth surface in front of the tongue; the opposite of facial. Left: Izquierda. Lip: Either of two fleshy folds that surround the mouth.
Temporary: Dentition Refers to the deciduous or primary teeth in the dental arch.Traumatized tooth: A tooth beneath the gum tissue that lies on top of another tooth, beneath bone or soft tissue, and is unlikely to grow on its own. Temporomandibular Joint Dysfunction: Abnormal function of the temporomandibular joint; It also refers to symptoms that occur in other secondary areas of dysfunction. Tartrectomy: Removal of supragingival tartar. Also called scaling. Torus: Bony bulge or protuberance of bone. Trigeminal: l Fifth cranial nerve
Trismus: Opening limitation. Tongue: Soft piece and large inthe mouth that you can use for speak taste and another things. Tooth/Teeth: White organs implanted in dental cavities. Tootache: It's the pain that occurs in the teeth.
Osseointegration: Process by which bone heals around an implant. Osteoplasty: Surgical procedure that modifies the configuration of the bone.
Osteotomy: Surgical cutting of a bone
Occlusal: Of or relating to the chewing surfaces of the premolars and molars or to the contact surfaces of opposing teeth or occlusal edges. Occlusion: Any contact between the biting or chewing surfaces of the teeth of the upper and lower jaw.
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Flap surgery: Technique used to lift the gum. Flap: Partially separated piece of gingival tissue, mobilized to access the alveolar bone. Filling: Material used to fill a cavity or replace part of a tooth. Fracture: Breakage of a part, especially of a bone structure; breakage of a tooth. Film: Thin nonbacterial layer of salivary origin that covers the teeth. Fixed Partial Prosthesis: It is the prosthetic replacement of one or more missing teeth that is cemented or bonded to the abutment teeth or implants adjacent to the space.
X-ray: Radiography.Xerostomia: Reduced salivary secretion that produces a sensation of dryness and sometimes burning in the oral mucosa and/or in cervical cavities.
Onlay: An indirect restoration made outside the oral cavity that covers the cusps of the tooth.Orthodontics: is the science of dentistry responsible for the supervision, care and correction of dentofacial structures, including those conditions that require tooth movement or the correction of related bone malformations. The practice of orthodontics includes the diagnosis, prevention, interception and treatment of all clinical forms of malocclusion and surrounding bone anomalies. It also deals with the design, application and control of therapeutic appliances as well as the care and guidance of the dentition and supporting structures in order to obtain and maintain optimal dentoskeletal relationships in functional and aesthetic balance with the craniofacial structures.
Resin/composite: Tooth-colored filling material used primarily on front teeth. While cosmetically superior, it is generally less durable than other materials. Restoration Adhesive: A technique for bonding a filling or filling material to a tooth. Bonding materials can be used to repair chipped, broken, misshapen or discolored teeth, or to fill a gap between teeth. Restoration: A procedure that uses the model of the tooth (an impression) to make a tooth to replace the missing one. Example: a crown. Root: Part Emdded in the bone, anchors the thoot in its bone cavity. Retainer: A dental appliance used to secure teeth after orthodontic treatment. Root Canal: Root Canal treatment is desingned to correct disorders in the dental pulp. Radiology: Are internal images of the theet and maxilars. Rinse: To maintain oral hygiene. Rotated thooth: It's a bad dental position.
Unerupted Tooth: that has not appeared in the oral cavity.
Ulcer:
shallow, crater-shaped sore (ulcer) on the tongue or inside the lip or cheek.
(Upper Jaw: maxilla) holds the upper teeth, shapes the middle of the face, and supports the nose.
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Yankauer suction tip: A dental instrument for removing excess fluids and debris from the oral cavity. Yirrell occlusal forceps: A specific type of dental forceps used for extracting molars.
Yttrium-aluminum-garnet (YAG) laser: A dental laser used for soft and hard tissue procedures.
Erosion: Wear of the tooth structure caused by chemical substances (acids). Eruption: When a tooth emerges or appears through the gum. Enamel: The outer and hardest layer of the teeth, it protects the dentin of the crown of the tooth. It is the hardest substance in the body and is composed almost entirely of calcium salts, protein and water. Exostosis: Hypertrophy of a normal bone Excision: Surgical removal of bone or other tissues. Exodontia: Tooth extraction Removal of a tooth. Surgical extraction of one or more teeth through the use of forceps and elevators for individual removal of the fragments. Extraction: The process or act of removing a tooth or parts of a tooth.
Zygomatic Implants: Particular types of implants that are considered an alternative for mouths with little bone due to the loss or resorption of bone in the upper jaw.
Jaw: function by moving in opposition to each other and are used for biting, chewing, and the handling of food.
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Periapical (Periapical): Area surrounding the root end of the tooth.
Pericoronaritis.Pericoronaritis: Is an acute, subacute or chronic infectious process, which is related to the soft tissues surrounding the crown of an impacted tooth product of the eruption of a tooth when perforating the oral mucosa. Periodontics Treatment: Of gums, tissue and bone in which the teeth are located. Periodontics: Is part of dentistry dedicated to the treatment of diseases of the supporting tissues of the teeth and the tissues that surround them. Periodontal Pertaining: To the supporting tissues of the teeth and the tissues that surround them. Periodontitis/gum: Chronic inflammation and destruction of the bone and tissue surrounding the roots of the teeth.
Quadrant: In dentistry, a quadrant refers to one of the four equal sections into which the dental arches can be divided. Quotient: The term quotient in dental discussions might refer to the occlusal quotient, which is the ratio of the functional surface area of the mandibular teeth to that of the maxillary teeth, influencing occlusion and bite dynamic.
ENGLISH GLOSSARY
Roger Sánchez
Created on November 12, 2023
Second year of the Dentistry Dental glossary English IV Teacher: Lellyn Garmendia
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Transcript
ENGLISH WORK
GLOSSARY
ENGLISH WORK
GLOSSARY
ENGLISH WORK
GLOSSARY
ENGLISH WORK
GLOSSARY
References
Bicuspids/premolars: The teeth with two rounded tips that sit between the fangs (cusps) and the molars. Bruxism: Involuntary grinding or clenching of the teeth. Bone graft: Replacing bone that is missing in a certain area of the maxilla or mandible. This can be animal, human or biocompatible synthetic compounds. Bacterial plaque: Soft and sticky substance that accumulates on the teeth, composed mainly of bacteria and bacterial derivatives. Bridges Fixed: tooth replacements, which are attached to adjacent natural teeth when one or more teeth are missing.
Sealant Fissure: Special composite resin for closing grooves and fissures in children's teeth to prevent future cavities.Sialorrhea: Exaggerated secretion of saliva. Sjogren's syndrome: An autoimmune disorder (mainly affecting older women) characterized by partial or total cessation of salivary and tear flow. Section: Portion of a maxillofacial prosthesis that serves to fill a defect as part of a prosthesis. Suture: A surgical stitch used to repair cuts or wounds. Salivary glands: Helps with nutrition and keep the mouth clean and healty. Saliva: Transparent liquid made up of 99% water and 1% others that protect the oral cavity. Scalpel: Used for surgical prcedures Sealant: It treatment serves to protect theeth from caries. Sensitivity: Acute dental pain caused by exposure dentin and stimuli.
Implant: Is a procedure that replaces the roots of the teeth with screw-like metal posts and replaces the missing or damaged tooth with an artificial tooth that looks the same and performs the same function as real teeth.Incisors: Inner Layer: Infection: Inflammation: Intra oral: Intra oral mirror: intra venous: Isolate:
The four front teeth in both the upper and lower jaws are called incisors. Their primary function is to cut food.
Is the innermost and softest layer of teeth.
Condition in which bacteria or viruses that cause disease have entered the body.
Is when your immune system sends out cells to fight bacteria or heal an injury.
Is when occurring, or performed within the mouth. How to use intraoral in a sentence.
Used to view tooth faces that are not reached naturally
Medical technique that administers fluids
Used to avoid contamination of the area to be worked
Wear: The normal deterioration of the tooth surface as a result of chewing. Width Third definitive molar. Wisdom tooth.Waiting room: Space were you wait for your turn.Wisdom Tooth: Wisdom tooth that is completely inside the bone. Wax: Protect the patient's mouth during their orthodontic treatment.
Hemisection: Excision of the root of a tooth, when the amputation is performed on two roots of a biradicular tooth, it is called hemisection.Heparin: It is a natural substance, present in all vertebrates. Found particularly in the liver, lung and intestine of mammals. There is no circulating heparin under normal conditions and its equivalent would be heparan sulfate (a heparinoid) which would be found in the endothelium, in contact with the blood and would contribute to the non-thrombogenicity of the endothelium. Herpes simplex virus: Virus that causes blisters to develop in the mouth or around the eyes and can be transmitted to the genital area. The latent virus can be reactivated by stress, trauma, other infections, or suppression of the immune system.
Cyst: Pathological cavity, generally lined by epithelium, containing liquid or soft matter. Calibration: This is one of the most important tasks in Digital Dentistry, since we need the appliances to work in the same way over time, to achieve optimal results. It consists of a comparison between measurements, one of known value or certainty based on a device different from the one we want to calibrate, or from a part of the same device. Cavities: Dental deterioration that can cause cavities. Cariogenic: That promotes the development of dental cavities. Cavity: Popular expression that defines dental caries. It also defines in dental medicine terms the hole that results from the removal of a cavity. Cementum: Hard connective tissue that covers the root of the tooth. Central/lateral: The four front teeth
Veneer: A plastic or porcelain covering placed on the front surface of the tooth or crown to achieve a natural appearance. Viruses: Infectious agents of very small size (200 to 300 nm) that require the synthetic machinery of the cells they parasitize to replicate.
Denture: Set of all teeth. There are a total of 32 pieces distributed in: 8 incisors, 4 canines, 8 premolars and 12 molars. Dentition: The teeth in the dental arch. Dentin: The part of the tooth that is beneath the enamel and cementum. Dentures: Removable dental prosthesis on a plastic base that rests directly on the gums. A denture can be complete or partial depending on the number of natural teeth missing. Dental Prosthesis: Artificial appliance that replaces one or more missing teeth. Dental pulp: The blood vessels and nerve tissue within the tooth.
Neck: the part of aperson's or animal's body connecting the head to the rest of the body. Nerve/s: the nervous system is the highly complex part of an animal that coordinates its actions and sensory information. Needle/s: A small slender usually steel instrument designed to carry sutures when sewing tissues in surgery.
Keratinized Gingiva: The outer layer of gum tissue that is tough and provides a protective barrier around the teeth. Ketorolac: An analgesic used post-dental procedures. Keratocyst: Cystic tumor whose capsule is formed by a squamous epithelium derived from the dental lamina or the primordial odontogenic epithelium.
Mouth cleaning: Action with an ultrasound device to remove tartar and dirt from the teeth. Malignant: Presenting dysplasia, invasion and metastasis. Malocclusion: Incorrect position of the biting or chewing surfaces of the upper and lower teeth. Malposition: of the biting or chewing surfaces of the upper and lower teeth. Mouth Guard Device that is placed over the teeth to prevent injuries to the teeth, mouth or lips. Mandible: Common name for the lower jaw. Maxilla Upper jaw. Molar Teeth: posterior to the premolars (bicuspids) on both sides of the jaws; grinding teeth that have wide crowns and wide chewing surfaces.
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Periodontitis: Inflammation and loss of connective tissue of the supporting structure or that surrounding the teeth with loss of adhesion. Post-stump: A support placed on the root of the tooth after a root canal has been performed, to strengthen the tooth and help keep the crown (dunda) in place. Post: A custom-made, elongated projecting piece that is cemented into the preparation in a root canal; It serves to retain a restorative material and/or a crown. Palate: The hard and soft tissues that form the roof of the mouth and separate the oral cavity from the nasal cavity. Root Canal: The part of the pulp cavity that is located within the root of the tooth; the chamber inside the root of the tooth that contains the pulp.
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Halitosis: Is the clinical term for bad breath. Food breakdown typically causes foul-smelling breath, though other culprits include dry mouth, poor dental hygiene and infection. Using tobacco or dieting can also cause bad breath, as can having certain diseases. Persistent bad taste in the mouth or bad breath might be an indication of periodontal disease. Hypersensitivity: Typically refers to tooth pain that is caused very easily and with a stimulus that normally would elicit no feeling. Hemisection: Surgical separation of a multi-rooted tooth.
Amalgam: A silver filling. Amalgam fillings, used for more than a century, have been proven to be safe, affordable, and long-lasting. Alveolar bone: The part of the jaw that surrounds the roots of the teeth. Abutment Tooth: (or implant) that supports a dental prosthesis. Alveolar process: The curved part of the jaw where the roots of the teeth are housed. Adhesive restoration: A technique for bonding a filling or filling material to a tooth. Bonding materials can be used to repair chipped, broken, misshapen or discolored teeth, or to fill a gap between teeth.
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Gum: Soft pink tissue that covers the jaw. Gingiva: Soft tissues that cover the crowns of unerupted teeth and surround the necks of those that have erupted. Gingivectomy: The excision or removal of the gum. Gingivitis: Inflammation of the gingival tissues without loss of connective tissue, caused by the accumulation of plaque or food particles. Gingivoplasty: Surgical procedure to remodel the gum. Gingival Hyperplasia: Overgrowth of gingival tissues. Guided Tissue Regeneration (GTR): Procedure during flap surgery for periodontal disease in which a membrane is inserted between the alveolar bone and the bone graft to stimulate the growth of gum tissues on the alveolar bone.
Laminate Veneer: A thin layer of plastic or porcelain that covers a front tooth to restore, strengthen, or improve its appearance.Limited Oral: Evaluation limited to a specific oral health problem. Labial: Pertaining to the lip or around the lip. Leukoplakia: A lesion characterized by whitish, flat or slightly raised spots, with a rough feel, that develops on the mucous membranes Lingual Of or about the language; tooth surface in front of the tongue; the opposite of facial. Left: Izquierda. Lip: Either of two fleshy folds that surround the mouth.
Temporary: Dentition Refers to the deciduous or primary teeth in the dental arch.Traumatized tooth: A tooth beneath the gum tissue that lies on top of another tooth, beneath bone or soft tissue, and is unlikely to grow on its own. Temporomandibular Joint Dysfunction: Abnormal function of the temporomandibular joint; It also refers to symptoms that occur in other secondary areas of dysfunction. Tartrectomy: Removal of supragingival tartar. Also called scaling. Torus: Bony bulge or protuberance of bone. Trigeminal: l Fifth cranial nerve Trismus: Opening limitation. Tongue: Soft piece and large inthe mouth that you can use for speak taste and another things. Tooth/Teeth: White organs implanted in dental cavities. Tootache: It's the pain that occurs in the teeth.
Osseointegration: Process by which bone heals around an implant. Osteoplasty: Surgical procedure that modifies the configuration of the bone. Osteotomy: Surgical cutting of a bone Occlusal: Of or relating to the chewing surfaces of the premolars and molars or to the contact surfaces of opposing teeth or occlusal edges. Occlusion: Any contact between the biting or chewing surfaces of the teeth of the upper and lower jaw.
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Flap surgery: Technique used to lift the gum. Flap: Partially separated piece of gingival tissue, mobilized to access the alveolar bone. Filling: Material used to fill a cavity or replace part of a tooth. Fracture: Breakage of a part, especially of a bone structure; breakage of a tooth. Film: Thin nonbacterial layer of salivary origin that covers the teeth. Fixed Partial Prosthesis: It is the prosthetic replacement of one or more missing teeth that is cemented or bonded to the abutment teeth or implants adjacent to the space.
X-ray: Radiography.Xerostomia: Reduced salivary secretion that produces a sensation of dryness and sometimes burning in the oral mucosa and/or in cervical cavities.
Onlay: An indirect restoration made outside the oral cavity that covers the cusps of the tooth.Orthodontics: is the science of dentistry responsible for the supervision, care and correction of dentofacial structures, including those conditions that require tooth movement or the correction of related bone malformations. The practice of orthodontics includes the diagnosis, prevention, interception and treatment of all clinical forms of malocclusion and surrounding bone anomalies. It also deals with the design, application and control of therapeutic appliances as well as the care and guidance of the dentition and supporting structures in order to obtain and maintain optimal dentoskeletal relationships in functional and aesthetic balance with the craniofacial structures.
Resin/composite: Tooth-colored filling material used primarily on front teeth. While cosmetically superior, it is generally less durable than other materials. Restoration Adhesive: A technique for bonding a filling or filling material to a tooth. Bonding materials can be used to repair chipped, broken, misshapen or discolored teeth, or to fill a gap between teeth. Restoration: A procedure that uses the model of the tooth (an impression) to make a tooth to replace the missing one. Example: a crown. Root: Part Emdded in the bone, anchors the thoot in its bone cavity. Retainer: A dental appliance used to secure teeth after orthodontic treatment. Root Canal: Root Canal treatment is desingned to correct disorders in the dental pulp. Radiology: Are internal images of the theet and maxilars. Rinse: To maintain oral hygiene. Rotated thooth: It's a bad dental position.
Unerupted Tooth: that has not appeared in the oral cavity. Ulcer:
shallow, crater-shaped sore (ulcer) on the tongue or inside the lip or cheek.
(Upper Jaw: maxilla) holds the upper teeth, shapes the middle of the face, and supports the nose.
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Yankauer suction tip: A dental instrument for removing excess fluids and debris from the oral cavity. Yirrell occlusal forceps: A specific type of dental forceps used for extracting molars. Yttrium-aluminum-garnet (YAG) laser: A dental laser used for soft and hard tissue procedures.
Erosion: Wear of the tooth structure caused by chemical substances (acids). Eruption: When a tooth emerges or appears through the gum. Enamel: The outer and hardest layer of the teeth, it protects the dentin of the crown of the tooth. It is the hardest substance in the body and is composed almost entirely of calcium salts, protein and water. Exostosis: Hypertrophy of a normal bone Excision: Surgical removal of bone or other tissues. Exodontia: Tooth extraction Removal of a tooth. Surgical extraction of one or more teeth through the use of forceps and elevators for individual removal of the fragments. Extraction: The process or act of removing a tooth or parts of a tooth.
Zygomatic Implants: Particular types of implants that are considered an alternative for mouths with little bone due to the loss or resorption of bone in the upper jaw.
Jaw: function by moving in opposition to each other and are used for biting, chewing, and the handling of food.
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Periapical (Periapical): Area surrounding the root end of the tooth. Pericoronaritis.Pericoronaritis: Is an acute, subacute or chronic infectious process, which is related to the soft tissues surrounding the crown of an impacted tooth product of the eruption of a tooth when perforating the oral mucosa. Periodontics Treatment: Of gums, tissue and bone in which the teeth are located. Periodontics: Is part of dentistry dedicated to the treatment of diseases of the supporting tissues of the teeth and the tissues that surround them. Periodontal Pertaining: To the supporting tissues of the teeth and the tissues that surround them. Periodontitis/gum: Chronic inflammation and destruction of the bone and tissue surrounding the roots of the teeth.
Quadrant: In dentistry, a quadrant refers to one of the four equal sections into which the dental arches can be divided. Quotient: The term quotient in dental discussions might refer to the occlusal quotient, which is the ratio of the functional surface area of the mandibular teeth to that of the maxillary teeth, influencing occlusion and bite dynamic.