Can overlap of dermatome-like fields in the maxillary canine region explain canine transpositions and canine agenesis?

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Can overlap of dermatome-like fields in the maxillary canine region explain canine transpositions and canine agenesis? / Kjaer, Inger; Arvedsen, Karen P.; Danielsen, Jakob C.

In: Dental Hypotheses, Vol. 9, No. 3, 2018, p. 64-67.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Kjaer, I, Arvedsen, KP & Danielsen, JC 2018, 'Can overlap of dermatome-like fields in the maxillary canine region explain canine transpositions and canine agenesis?', Dental Hypotheses, vol. 9, no. 3, pp. 64-67. https://doi.org/10.4103/denthyp.denthyp_22_18

APA

Kjaer, I., Arvedsen, K. P., & Danielsen, J. C. (2018). Can overlap of dermatome-like fields in the maxillary canine region explain canine transpositions and canine agenesis? Dental Hypotheses, 9(3), 64-67. https://doi.org/10.4103/denthyp.denthyp_22_18

Vancouver

Kjaer I, Arvedsen KP, Danielsen JC. Can overlap of dermatome-like fields in the maxillary canine region explain canine transpositions and canine agenesis? Dental Hypotheses. 2018;9(3):64-67. https://doi.org/10.4103/denthyp.denthyp_22_18

Author

Kjaer, Inger ; Arvedsen, Karen P. ; Danielsen, Jakob C. / Can overlap of dermatome-like fields in the maxillary canine region explain canine transpositions and canine agenesis?. In: Dental Hypotheses. 2018 ; Vol. 9, No. 3. pp. 64-67.

Bibtex

@article{bcd4753c5cb34d1ca70b00a1afc9d93c,
title = "Can overlap of dermatome-like fields in the maxillary canine region explain canine transpositions and canine agenesis?",
abstract = "Introduction: Questions concerning maxillary canine transposition and maxillary canine agenesis remain unexplained. These questions are raised in this original hypothesis. The Hypothesis: The hypotheses are that the maxillary canine can be located in a separate dermatome field and that this field can overlap neighboring fields just as overlap occurs in body dermatomes. It is also hypothesized that delay in innervation and maturation of dermatome-like canine field may be the etiology behind maxillary canine agenesis and combined canine agenesis and first premolar agenesis. Evaluation of the Hypothesis: It is demonstrated in this article how embryology, growth, and development combined with clinical examples makes it possible to suggest answers to these rare questions concerning transposition and agenesis of the maxillary canines. The answers might be the foundation of future studies for genotypic mapping. All though the answers to these hypotheses seem reasonable, they are difficult to prove.",
keywords = "Canine agenesis, embryology tooth formation, neural crest fields, transposition",
author = "Inger Kjaer and Arvedsen, {Karen P.} and Danielsen, {Jakob C.}",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.4103/denthyp.denthyp_22_18",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
pages = "64--67",
journal = "Dental Hypotheses",
issn = "2155-8213",
publisher = "Dental Hypotheses",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Can overlap of dermatome-like fields in the maxillary canine region explain canine transpositions and canine agenesis?

AU - Kjaer, Inger

AU - Arvedsen, Karen P.

AU - Danielsen, Jakob C.

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - Introduction: Questions concerning maxillary canine transposition and maxillary canine agenesis remain unexplained. These questions are raised in this original hypothesis. The Hypothesis: The hypotheses are that the maxillary canine can be located in a separate dermatome field and that this field can overlap neighboring fields just as overlap occurs in body dermatomes. It is also hypothesized that delay in innervation and maturation of dermatome-like canine field may be the etiology behind maxillary canine agenesis and combined canine agenesis and first premolar agenesis. Evaluation of the Hypothesis: It is demonstrated in this article how embryology, growth, and development combined with clinical examples makes it possible to suggest answers to these rare questions concerning transposition and agenesis of the maxillary canines. The answers might be the foundation of future studies for genotypic mapping. All though the answers to these hypotheses seem reasonable, they are difficult to prove.

AB - Introduction: Questions concerning maxillary canine transposition and maxillary canine agenesis remain unexplained. These questions are raised in this original hypothesis. The Hypothesis: The hypotheses are that the maxillary canine can be located in a separate dermatome field and that this field can overlap neighboring fields just as overlap occurs in body dermatomes. It is also hypothesized that delay in innervation and maturation of dermatome-like canine field may be the etiology behind maxillary canine agenesis and combined canine agenesis and first premolar agenesis. Evaluation of the Hypothesis: It is demonstrated in this article how embryology, growth, and development combined with clinical examples makes it possible to suggest answers to these rare questions concerning transposition and agenesis of the maxillary canines. The answers might be the foundation of future studies for genotypic mapping. All though the answers to these hypotheses seem reasonable, they are difficult to prove.

KW - Canine agenesis

KW - embryology tooth formation

KW - neural crest fields

KW - transposition

U2 - 10.4103/denthyp.denthyp_22_18

DO - 10.4103/denthyp.denthyp_22_18

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85056262537

VL - 9

SP - 64

EP - 67

JO - Dental Hypotheses

JF - Dental Hypotheses

SN - 2155-8213

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 210155623