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ANTHROPOLOGY
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ANTHROPOLOGY
Anthropos + logos - Anthropology
Anthropo- Human
logos - Science
“ANTHROPOLOGIST” - ARISTOTLE
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DEFINITIONS
KROEBER – Anthropology is the science of
groups of men and their behavior and
production.
JACOBS & STERN – Anthropology is the
scientific study of the physical, social, and
cultural development and behavior of human
beings since their appearance on the earth.
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Classification of anthropology
 PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY
 CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY
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PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY
1. HUMAN GENETICS
2. HUMAN PALEONTOLOGY
3. ETHNOLOGY
4. ANTHROPOMETRY
5. BIOMETRY
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CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY
1. PREHISTORIC ANTHROPOLOGY
2. SOCIAL ANTHROPOLOGY
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PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY
Physical anthropology is concerned with man as a
physical organism in ‘time’ & ‘space’
 Study of the man through evolutionary
processes
 study of human populations
BEALS & HOIJER – The study of processes where
by man developed from his non human
ancestors and the continuing process of change
still slowly altering his bodily form.
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PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY
HUMAN GENETICS
E.C.COLIN – Genetics is the branch of biology which deals
with the laws and principles of heredity and variation as
observed in plants, in animals and in human.
HUMAN PALEONTOLOGY
Webster’s New International Dictionary – Human
paleontology is the science that deals with life of the past
geographical periods.
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PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY
ETHNOLOGY
S.S DUBE – Ethnology is a comparative study of the races
and culture of mankind in their different aspects.
ANTHROPOMETRY
HERSKOVITS – The measurements of man
BIOMETRY
CHARLES WINIK – Biometry is the statistical analysis of
biological studies specially as applied to such areas as
disease, birth, growth, and death.
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Cultural anthropology
E.A . HOEBEL – Culture is the sum total
of learned behavioral patterns
.
1. PREHISTORIC ARCHEOLOGY
BEALS & HOIJER – It deals with ancient
cultures and with past phases of
modern civilization.
.
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Cultural anthropology
2. SOCIAL ANTHROPOLOGY
CHARLES WINIK – Social anthropology is
the study of social behavior especially
from the point of view of the systematic
comparative study of social forms and
institutions.
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Human evolution
PRIMATOLOGY
PRIMATE PALEONTOLOGY
Mammal
Protheria Theria
Metatheria Eutheria
Primate
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Characteristics of primates
1. Limbs - prehensile
2. Thumb / great toe
3. Nails - grasping function
4. Teeth - adopted for mixed food
5. Mammary gland - lactation
6. Brain - well developed
7. Clavicle
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Classification of primates
 Prosimian
 anthropoidea
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Classification of primates
1. Prosimian primates ( 60 mil years )
a. lemuroidea - lemur, loris
b. torsoidea - torsier
 Earliest true primates
 Well developed cerebellar cortices
 Limbs had highly mobile joints
 Unspecialised tooth cusps
 Dental formula – I 2/2 C1/1 PM 3/3 M3/3
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ANTHROPOIDEA
1. Ceboidea ( Platyrrhine of New World Monkeys)
2. Cercopithecoidea ( Catarrine Of Old World
Monkeys )
3. Hominoidea
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ANTHROPOIDEA
CEBOIDEA – ( spider monkey )
 The higher primates
Dental formula – I 2/2, C1/1, PM2/2, M3/3
 4 blunt cusps on molars
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ANTHROPOIDEA
Cercopithecidae –( Macaque monkey )
1. Arboreal in their habits
2. Non prehensile tails
3. Dental formula – I2/2, C1/1, PM2/2, M3/3
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HOMINOIDEA
Hominoidea is further sub divided into
 Pongids
 Australopithecines
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ANTHROPOIDEA
Pongids ( Great apes )
Ex : Gibbons, Gorillas, Orang-utans, Chimpanzees
 Large brains
 Pelvic girdle & legs became more robust
 Orangutans remained arboreal
 Chimpanzees, gorillas are quadripedal
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HOMINOIDS
AUSTRALOPITHECINES
First bipedal fossil anthropoids found in rocks of Eastern
& South Africa ( 1-3.6 mil years ago )
HOMO ERUCTUS ( Upright man )
HOMOSAPIENS HOMOSAPIENS
SAPIENS
NIANDERTHALENSIS
( Cro-magnon man ) ( Neanderthal man )www.indiandentalacademy.com
Neanderthal man
skull-Very large
-Dolico cephalic
-Face is highly developed
with maxillay prognathism
-Lower jaw is strong & large
-chin is less prominent
-human dentition
-canine is of ordinary size
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Cro-magnon man
Skull–large & massive
-face is short, and flat
-maxillary region
shows less marked
prognathism
-lower jaw is strong
& not massive
-a well marked chin
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MODERN MAN
Final steps to modern man ( 20 mil years )
1. Remarkable increase in brain size gave the
forehead a more domed appearance
2. Folding of cerebral cortex
3. Bipedal walking
4. Use of hands for manipulation
5. Occipital ridges became small
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MODERN MAN
7. Simplification of nasal region
8. Reduced prognathism
9. Chin increased
in prominence
10. Angle between
base of the skull and
cervical vertebrae is 900
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Evolution of human face
Face is the seat of principle sense organs
In lower vertebrates
No fully ossified skeleton
Jaw muscles are merely modified gill arch muscles
Teeth are specialisations of tough shagreen or skin with
minute calcified papillae or denticles
In the amphibians
The bony plates behind the jaws have disappeared, leaving
an exposed area –orbit notch
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In the fossil, mammal like reptiles
The bony mask of the temporal region is
perforated
Complex dentary – lower jaw
Dentary becomes enlarged & presses external
pterygoid muscle, forming the cushion –
meniscus ( glenoid fossa )
Heat regulating devices
Forward migration of neck muscles
Bony mask was replaced by skin
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FACIAL FORM
Each person’s face is a custom made original
Anthropologists can reconstructs the face from a
dry skull
The biologic rationale underlying common
variations :
1. Different facial types
2. Male & female developmental facial differences
3. Child & adult facial differences
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Head form
Two general extremes
 Dolicocephalic ( long, narrow )
leptoprosopic
 Brachycephalic ( Wide, short, globular )
euryprosopic
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DOLICOCEPHALIC
 Nose is longer &
Protrusive with Aquiline
type of Nasal contour
 Convex profile
 Cheek bones are less prominent
 Longer, narrower, & deeper maxillary arch &
palate
 Downward & backward rotation of the mandible
 Receding chin
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BRACHYCEPHALIC
 Nose is protrusively
shorter (rounded tip )
 Prominent cheek bones
 Concave / straight profile
 Wider, shorter and more shallow palate and
maxillary arch
 Mandible is more protrusive
 More prominent chin
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DINARIC HEAD FORM
Dinaric Alps, Yugoslavia
“Brachycephalised
dolicocephalic”
Flattened occipital regions
Bossing of parietal regions
Skull has triangular configuration
Fore head is sloping & the profile tending towards
orthognathic
Mandible tends to be less retrusive
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Male versus female features
 Size & configuration
of the nose
 Fore head
 Cheek bones
 upper jaw look
more prominent in
females
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Child versus adult features
 Nasal part is small
 Dentition ( primary & permanent )
 Jaw bones (masticatory musles & airway)
Head form
Sexual dimorphism
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Child versus adult features
Child’s face is not a miniature of the adult face
1. Forehead
2. Face appears
diminutive in child
3. Nasal region
4. Eyes appears wide set
5. Mandible is small
6. chin is incompletely formed
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Evolution of teeth
Lobe finned fishes
- upper & lower jaws had bone bearing
plates ( labyrinthodont )
- peg formed teeth
Reptiles & mammals
 teeth are set in separate sockets
 cone shaped canines
 milk teeth & permanent teeth
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RACE
“A group that differs from other
classes or human group by virtue of some
specific physiological characteristics that
are found uniformly within that group”
- Maclver & page
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RACIAL CLASSIFICATION
Important characters used for racial
determination :
 skin colour
 hair
 head form
 face
 nose
 eye
 stature
 blood groups
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CLASSIFICATION
CATEGORIES OF CRITERIA
 COMMON VARIABLE CHARACTERS
 COMMON PHYSIOLOGICAL CHARACTERS
 RARE GENETIC CHARACTERS
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RACIAL CLASSIFICATION
1. NEGROID
2. CAUCASOID
3. MANGOLOID
AUSTRALOIDS
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NEGROIDS
African negroes & oceanic negros
 woolly or frizzly hair on the head
 Black coloured skin
 Nose is broad and flat
 Lips are thick and everted
 Facial prognathism
 Brow ridges are small
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MANGOLOID
PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS
 Black, straight, coarse hair
 Yellowish brown colour skin
 Broad flat face with prominent cheek
bones
 Mangoloid fold
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MANGOLOIDS
1. CLASSIC / CENTRAL MANGOLOID
-Northern Chaina, Tibet& Mangolia
2. ARCTIC / ESKIMOID
-Northern Asia, arctic coast of north
America
3. INDONESIAN - MALAY MANGOLOID
-Japan, Thailand, Southern China
4. AMERICAN INDIAN
-North, Middle, and South America
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CAUCASOID
Skin – fair, olive & all shades of brown
Hair – flat, wavy to various degrees of
curliness
Head form –dolicocephalic to
brachycephalic
Nose – leptorrhine to mesorrhine
Jaws –no prognathism
Chin - pronounced
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CAUCASOIDS
1. MEDITERRANEAN- all sea shores ( India,
Spain, Portugal, France etc. )
2. NORDIC – Scandinavians, Northern Germany,
Northern France
3. ALPINE – Central Europe
4. EAST BALTIC – North eastern Germany,
Poland, Baltic states
5. DINARIC –Dinaric alps region in Yugoslavia
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CAUCASOIDS
6. ARMENOIDS – turkey, Syria,Palestine Iraq,
Iran
7. CELTIC – Iceland, Scotland and western
Europe
8. LAPP – Norway, Sweden
9. INDO-DRAVIDIAN –south & central India
10. POLYNESIAN – Polynesian islands of the
pacific e.g. New Zealand
11. AINU – ancient stock of Japan
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Australoids
They closely resemble the Caucasoids in
many characters
1. Australian aborigins -Australia
2. Pre-Dravidian ( veddoid )- South and
central India including Typical Indian
tribes
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Races in india
Sir Herbert Risley ( > 75 yrs )
Based on Indo-Aryans ( west )
mangoloids ( east)
 Dravidian
 Indo Aryan
 Mangoloid
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RACES IN INDIA
Based on the measurements on the samples of
indian population – Risley
1. Turko- iranian – they inhabitat the Baluchistan
( now in Pakistan ). Tall in nature&
brachycephalic
2. Indo- aryan – eastern part of Punjab Rajastan
& Kashmir. Tall & fair complexioned
3. Scytho-dravidian- hilly traces of Madhya
pradesh, & Coorg. Medium statured &
Brachycephalic
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 Aryo- dravidian – U.P. Rajastan & Bihar. Short
statured & mesocephalic
 Mangolo- dravidian- Bengal & Orissa Stature is
medium & sometimes short, round headed with
medium nose
 Mangoloid – Himalayan regions ( Nepal, Bhutan,
Assam, & North eastern states
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Dental anthropology
Beginning - Eighties of 18th
century
Recognised - 20th
century
Founder of american journal of physical
anthropology – Ales Hrdlicka
The term dental anthropology was used in
early 1900s
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Different aspects of anthropology ( applied
anthropology )
 Dental development
 Dental pathology
 Dental morphology
 Forensic odontology
 odontometry
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DENTAL DEVELOPMENT
Tooth eruption standards which are
relatively independent of general body
growth and skeletal maturation are of
great significance in the diagnosis &
treatment planning of children with growth
disturbances
protein-calorie malnutrition ( PCM )
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PATHOLOGY
Dental caries – it is a pathologic condition of the
teeth resulting in the decalcification of the
dentin, enamel and the disintegration of the
remaining organic material often leading to the
loss of teeth.
Caries susceptibility expresses the inherent or
acquired proneness to caries
Low incidence of caries in the prehistoric as also in
the living tribal communities – coarse & fibrous
food products
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DENTAL MORPHOLOGY
Teeth are best preserved & most easily
accessible anatomical system of the body.
pioneering studies – Hrdlicka, Dahlberg,
Campbell, Hellmen, Krogman, Moorrees
etc.
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1.Supernumerary teeth or hyperdontia
- causes dental disturbances by interfering
with normal eruption
- either peg shaped or have large crown
- Higher frequency in the maxilla
-Campbell conducted a study on the skulls
and living Australian aborigines.(1.8% )
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2.Carabelli’s cusp or anomaly
Von Carabelli in 1842
Its occurrence – back to paleolithic man
An elevation or tubercle on the lingual surface of
the mesio-lingual cusp of the maxillary molars
particularly the first one
A marker for differentiation between different
ethnic groups.
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3.Shovel-shaped incisors
“SHOVELLING” – Muhlreiter ( 1870 )
A condition resulting from a combination of a
concave lingual surface and elevated mesial
and distal marginal ridges enclosing a central
fossa in the upper and lower incisor teeth
Hrdlicka ( 1911 ) had done pioneering work in
dental anthropology and reported pronounced
shovelling in the incisors of american indians
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Acco. to Hrdlicka – 4 grades of shovelling
1. Shovel- enamel rim has well developed fossa
2. Semi shovel- enamel rim is distinct but with
shallower fossa
3. Trace shovel- enamel rim has distinct traces
4. No shovel- enamel rim has no fossa
HELLMAN –marked, medium, trace, and absent
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4.Diastema
It is a space or gap present between the maxillary
central incisors or between the lateral incisors
and canines
Former – median diastema (combined with small
laterla incisors or large labial frenum)
Latter – lateral diastema (found in anthropoid apes
& certain fossil men )
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5. Crowding
Lasker – inheritence of large teeth from one
parent and a small jaw from the other
6. Cingulum or lingual cusp
A shelf or swelling which is found on the
tooth just above the central line
Site of development of many supernumerary
cusps
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7. Occlusion
Relationship between the masticatory
surfaces of the maxillary and mandibular
teeth when the mouth is closed
-heriditory factors
-environmental factors
The term ‘malocclusion’ is illdefined and
biased - corrucini & whitley
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1. Overjet – normal (2-4mm),
- positive (>5mm)
- extreme positive(>7mm)
- negative, extreme negative
2. Overbite-
3. Posterior cross bite
4.buccal segment relation
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FORENSIC ODONTOLOGY
Deals with the identification & study of
human teeth
identification of a person involved in mass
disasters ( autobobile/aircraft accidents,
floods, building collapse and industrial
hazards)
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ODONTOMETRY
Tooth size standards based on odontometry can
be used in the age & sex determination of
skeletal and also living population
Studies – males have larger teeth (mesio distal
crown diameters )
- canines show greatest amount of
sexual dimorphism
-Europeans have smaller teeth than
mangolians or other racial groups
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Dr.V. Rami reddy conducted a retrospective cross
sectional study on population of Gulbarga
disrtict (1971-1975)
1. Eruptiion pattern
2. Dental caries
3. Dental morphology
.
.
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AIMS & OBJECTIVES
1. To indicate the general and detailed eruption
pattern of different types of deciduous and
permanent teeth by variables such as sex, age
and economic status.
2. To indicate the general and detailed
prevalence of caries in both deciduous &
permanent teeth by above variables
3. To indicate the general & detailed frequency
occurrence of various morphological traits.
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Deciduous & permanent dental eruption
 The times of onset as well as completion of
eruption are earlier in females than males
 Mandibular teeth precedes over maxillary teeth
in both sexes
 Teeth eruption is fast in higher income group
children
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Dental caries – deciduous dentition
By sex
 Male children (33.4%)>female children( 26.8% )
By income
 Lower income group > upper income group
By age
 Central incisors –5 years
 Lateral incisors – 3 years
 Canines – 6 years
 First & second molars – 7 to 10 years
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Dental caries – permanent dentition
By sex
 Difference is insignificant (females > males )
By income
 Upper income group > middle & lower
By age
 Incisors – 22 to 23 years
 Canines – free from the disease
 Premolars & molars – 22-23 years
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Dental morphology
Supernumerary teeth
Permanent dentition ( 0.86% ) >
deciduous dentition ( 0.06% )
Maxilla > mandible – Ruffer ( 1920 )
Carabelli’s anomaly
35% out of total deciduous teeth& 27% of
permanent dentition
Female > male
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Dental morphology
Crowding
both dentitions
Female > male
Diastema
Deciduous teeth > permanent teeth
-Male > female
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“Epidemological transition”
Phenomenon of changes in frequencies of
certain serious diseases – omeron (1971)
‘diseases of civilisation’
or
‘western diseases’ – Trowell & Burkitt
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“Epidemolodic transition in minor diseases”
 Chronic allergy – cow’s milk, dust, pollution and
food additives
 Oral breathing – facial collapse syndrome
- narrowing of the upper arch
- buccal cross bites
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Bite force studies
normal adult chewing – 15-17kg of force
maximum - 28-39kg of force
Bite force is relevant to the functional aspects of
dento-facial dysplasia.
Ordinary chewing and maximum bite forces were
significantly higher among more traditional rural
Punjabi youths than among urban youths
- Corruccini & Kaul
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 Solution is the restoration of proper
function by means of chewing hard ,
fibrous foods – stimulate the masticatory
apparatus
- greater flow of the alkaline
saliva
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Evolution of teeth
 Non mammalian vertebrates –
Polyphyodonty
 During growth of the animal – increase in
the jaw size is associated with tooth size
(Trout – number will increase )
 In mammals –Diphyodonty (2 dentitions )
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Dentition of fishes ( agnatha )
EX; Sea lamprey
 No true calcified teeth
 Arranged circumferentially
 Horny teeth are also seen on the tongue
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Chondrichthyes (bony fishes )
 All types of dental specialisations
 Homodont & polyphyodont
 Teeth are covered by enameloid
lower jaw of shark
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osteochthyes
 Haplodont – prehention
 Polyphyodont
 Teeth- vomer, palatine bones roof of the
mouth & tongue
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Amphibia
 Small, homodont, polyphyodont –
prehension
 In the frog – small teeth on the upper jaw
& no teeth on the lower jaw
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Reptiles
 Homodont & polyphyodont
 Tend to be tricuspid or cone shaped
 Egg teeth – in embryos of lizards & snakes
- used to break the shell
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Dentition of mammals
 Heterodont ( 4 types )
 Restricted to 2 rows
 Ability to masticate – improves digestive
efficiency for high rate of metabolism
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Other features
 TMJ articulation
 Salivary glands
 Prismatic enamel
 Diphyodonty
 Secondary palate
 Significant muscle development
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Dentition of protheria
 Spiny ant eater – edentulous
 Duck bulled platypus – 3 functional
posterior teeth in each jaw quadrant
 A No. additional teeth develop but do not
erupt or resorb
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Metatheria
 An unusual feature – only last premolar
will have a successor
 Anteriorly many teeth are present but not
functional
 Morphology is same with placental
animals
 Dental formula – 3/3, 0/0, 1/1, 4/4
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Eutheria
 Insectivoral
Ex; hedge hog
 Molars – primitive trabacular form with
sharp, high cusps which interdigitate with
those of the opposite jaw
 Suitable for crushing the shells of insects
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Rodentia
Ex; rat
 Heterogenous
 Continuously growing incisors
 DF 1/1, 0/0. 0/0, 3/3
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Carnivora
 Enlarged canines – offensive weapons
 More prominent specialisations are in cat
family
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Primates
Prosimian
Ex; lemur
Herbivorous & insectivorous
DF – 2/2, 1/1, 3/3, 3/3
Lower incisors & canines are prominent
mid line diastema
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Anthropoidea
 Macaca monkey
 DF – 2/2, 1/1, 2/2, 3/3
 Canines are long & prominent ( esp. in male )
 Lateral diastema
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Differences between apes & man
Apes man
 ‘U’ shaped arches parabolic
 Edge to edge overlap of upper &
incisor relation lower incisors
 Male canines are no sexual dimorphism
large
 Lateral diastema no lateral diastema
 Pointed cusps rounded cusps
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ANTHROPOSCOPY
Anthropos – human
Skopein - examine
 Judging the body by inspection
 Cannot be expressed numerically
 Head must be in the rest position – the
relationship of paired features will be
assessed
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Criteria for judgment
 examiner’s esthetic perception &
experience
 Paired features are judged for level,
contour & size
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Qualitative signs
 Head
1.Hairline – distinctive, indistinctive
2.Forehead – unilaterally protruding
forehead
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Face
1. FACIAL PROFILE –
Normal Bird like Dish like
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Shape of the face
Proportionate Long& short&
narrow wide
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Shape of the face
square triangular trapezoid
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Facial mid axis quality
In midline concave with dislocated
chin
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Chin contour
Indented flat
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ANTHROPOMETRY
“It is a systematised art of measuring and
taking observations of man, his skeleton,
his brain or other organs, by the most
reliable means and methods for scientific
purposes”
-ALES HRDLICKA
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Anthropos -human &
metron -measure
Anthropometry represents the typical and
traditional tool of physical anthropology
Johann Friedrich Blumenbach (1752-1840)
3 types of head form
1. Square
2. Long
3. Laterally compressed
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Broca, Flower, Turner further developed the study
of the skulls on the foundations laid by
Blumenbach
Father of Anthropometry – BROCA
Broca’s methods were universal until 1870
In 1874, Ihering pointed out the weaknesses in
Broca’s method
craniometric conferences were held at
Munich(1877) and Berlin(1880)
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Kollmann, Ranke, and Virchow prepared a
scheme for craniometric techniques.
This was presented and approved at the 13th
general congress of the German
Anthropological Society held at Frankfurt
(1882)
www.indiandentalacademy.com
SUBDIVISIONS OF ANTHROPOMETRY
 SOMATOMETRY -Living body including
head and face
 Osteometry -Skeletal long and short
bones
 Craniometry -Skull
 Physiometry -Bodily & mental
functions
www.indiandentalacademy.com
MEASURING TOOLS & TECHNIQUES
REQUISITES
1. Should be accurate
2. Not easily distorted
3. Handy or easy to manipulate
4. Easily transportable for field work
www.indiandentalacademy.com
sliding caliper - it measures
the linear projective distances
between 2 land marks in the
same plane
Ex; eye fissure length,mouth width
The standard instruments
www.indiandentalacademy.com
2. Spreading caliper
When the projective linear
distance has to be determined
between distant surfaces and
various planes
Ex; length of the head & width of the head
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Soft metric tape
Used for determining the tangential linear
distances taken along the skin surface
between 2 land marks
Ex; maxillary & mandibular arcs of the face
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Large double sliding calipers with levels
–used when measuring projective
distances involving the vertex and the
opisthocranion land marks of the head
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Measuring tools with
various modifications
 Nose deviation
protractor
 Nostril inclination
protractor
 Nasal root and
alar- slope angle meter
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Multipurpose
facial angle meter
 Pointed portion –measuring
nasofrontal,nasolabial, mentolabial angles
 Small & large forked portions – determining the
nasal tip & mentocervical angles
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Commercial angle meter
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Selection of subjects
Selection will be on the basis of
 Blood – 1.between individuals of same race
2. Between individuals of different race
 Normalcy – pathologic conditions & anomalies
alter the size, shape, & other characters
( rachtis, pagets disease, & clefts )
 Age & sex
www.indiandentalacademy.com
 Age –
1. Eruption of teeth
2. Union of epiphysis
3. Condition of teeth
4. Condition of cranial structures - sutures
5. General condition of the weight of the
bones
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Positioning the subject
Subjects to be seated in the dental chair
with the head resting on the head support
Head of the examiner must be level with the
head of the subject
Standard orientation of the head –FH plane
 Projective measurements
www.indiandentalacademy.com
FACIAL MID LINE
3 anatomic points
 The nasion ( root of the nose )
 The subnasale (base of the columella )
 The gnathion / menton (lower edge of the
mandible
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Land marks
‘Certain anatomic points used to take body
measurements’
Short abbreviations used instead of full names
( small letters )
ex; nasion – n
Land marks may have similar name but differ in
location
Ex; porion
To avoid errors – they should be marked on the
skin
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Head
 Vertex – highest
point of the head
 Glabella – most
prominent midline
point between eyebrows
 Opisthocranion – most posterior point of the
line of greatest head length
 Eurion – the most prominent lateral point on
each side of the skull
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Land marks
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Measurements of head region
HORIZONTAL HEAD POSITION
1. Width of the head
– eu to eu
2. Width of the forehead
- ft to ft
3. Skull base width
- t to t
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Perpendicular head position
1. Height of the culvarium – v-tr
2. Anterior height of the head
v-n
3. Specific height of the
head – v-en
4. Height of the head &
nose – v to sn
5. Combined height of
the head & face – v to gn
www.indiandentalacademy.com
 Length of the head
g to op
 Circumference of
the head
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Face
 Width of the face
zy to zy
 Width of the mandible
go to go
www.indiandentalacademy.com
 Height of the upper
profile – tr to prn
 Height of the lower
profile – prn to gn
 Lower half of the
cranio- facial height – en to gn
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Facial arc
measurements
 Supra-orbital arc
 Maxillary arc
 Mandibular arc
www.indiandentalacademy.com
 Height of the mandibular
ramus – go to cdl
 Depth of the body
go to gn
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Depth measurements of the face
1. Tragion-glabellar depth
2. Tragion-nasion depth
3. Tragion-subnasaledepth
4. Tragion-gnathion depth
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Nose
 Nasofrontal angle
Angle between the proximal nasal bridge
contour and the anterior surface of the
forehead below the glabella
www.indiandentalacademy.com
 Nasal tip angle
Angle between columella & nasal bridge
www.indiandentalacademy.com
 Naso labial angle
( septolabial angle
or columella labial angle)
Angle between columella & upper lip skin
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Lips & mouth
 Width of the mouth
( inter commisural
distance )
ch to ch
www.indiandentalacademy.com
 Upper lip height
Sn to sto
 Height of the skin
portion of the upper lip
sn to ls
 Height of the skin
portion of the lower lip
li to sl
 Lower lip height - sto to sl
www.indiandentalacademy.com
 Vermilion height of
the upper lip
ls to sto
 Vermilion height of
the lower lip
sto to li
www.indiandentalacademy.com
 Labio mental angle – between skin
surface of the lower lip and the surface
contour of the chin
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Sources of errors in
anthropometry & anthroposcopy
Commonest sources of error:
 Improper identification of landmarks
 Inadequate use of measuring equipment
 Improper measuring technique
www.indiandentalacademy.com
anthropometry
Improper identification of land marks:
Soft tissue land marks – easy to locate in a
healthy person’ face & difficult in a deformed
face
Bony land marks – palpation
easy to locate – orbitale
difficult to locate – gonion
In congenitally deformed faces – reference to
adjacent structures
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Head
 Vertex – depends upon the FH plane
 Eurion – difficult to locate on irregular surface
 Glabella – replaced by a point in the mid axis of
the face at the level of the upper ridge of the
eyebrows
 Trichion – difficult to locate in early childhood, &
at the first stages of baldness
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Face
 Zygion – difficult to locate in 1st
& 2nd
brachial
arch syndromes
 Gonion – difficult if they are covered with thick
skin & hypo plastic mandible
 Pogonion – difficult in receding chin & ‘falso
pogonion protrusion’
 Gnathion – markedly receding lower jaw
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Nose
 Nasion – difficult after injuries, noses with
silastic implants, deep naso-frontal angle
 Subnasale – at the bottom of the curve of the
curve but difficult to locate in sharp angle
 Pronasale – best viewed from profile
difficult in bifid nose with uneven tip
heights
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Lips & mouth
 Stomion – mid point of the labial fissure
dislocated mouth- philtrum
 Labrale superious – position varies after surgery of cleft
lip
 Chelion – points at right & left commisures of the labial
fissure
difficult in older patients because of a fine
shallow ridge of the skin
repeated inspection
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Problems with measuring tools
 Standard measurements are not used
 If they are used improperly
 examiner should be familiar with the areas
 Accuracy varies with instruments
sliding calipers – accurate
sliding calipers – up to 3mm error
tape –shortens the distance when pressed &
should be tightened to eliminate the effect of the
hair
fabric tape follows the contours of the face
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Improper measuring technique
 POSITION OF THE HEAD – improper measurements
( especially projective measurements )
 Head tends to return to the rest position during
examination – must be checked before measurement
 50
to 100
of error in inclination
 In patients with asymmetric FHs, the difference between
two horizontals must be assessed
Farkas – left FH is closer to the rest position
www.indiandentalacademy.com
FACIAL MID LINE – border between right & left
halves
Errors can be made in judging the facial
asymmetry
Nasion is the most stable point
The heights will be changed with expressions on
the face ( crying, smiling )
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Anthroposcopy
 Errors result from
1. Incorrect positioning of the patient’s
head
2. Wrong angle of view of the examiner’s
eyes
3. Poor lighting
4. Poor esthetic assessment & talent
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Head
Visual judgment of the height of the fore head
depends on the
1. Position of the head during inspection
2. Inclination of the fore head
3. Position of the ears
Face
 Lower face height would appear small in the
presence of a receding mandible
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Lips & mouth
Frontal view – size of the upper lip depends
on the naso-labial angle & the position of
the skin surface
Curved nasolabial angle & protruding skin –
short upper lip
Vertical upper lip & obtuse angle – longer lip
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Nose
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Applied anthropometry
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Anthropometry
in cleft lip & palate patients
 Combined orthodontic & surgical
treatment
 Poor esthetics and nasal deformity
( displacement of the soft tissue
elements )
 Esthetics – no uniform definition
 Goals - Balance & harmony
 Accepted standards
www.indiandentalacademy.com
 Common technique – visual assessment
based on the rating scale
- subjective & unreliable
 Radiographic cephalometry
 Photographs
 Physical anthropometry – objective
documentation of facial features
- determination of need for surgery
-comparison of facial features before &
after surgery
www.indiandentalacademy.com
 Morphological study of growth patterns of
nasolabial region – Farkas
 6 measurements in 1593 north American
Caucasians ( 1 to 18 yrs )
 Age 1 – highest growth of the cutaneous portion
of the upper lip & width of the nose
 Age 5 – upper lip reaches adult size
 Age 14 to 15 – nose is fully developed
www.indiandentalacademy.com
In craniomaxillo- facial surgery
“Anthropometry is the objective analysis
that replaces subjective judgement”
 Mean , standard deviations of key facial
measurements at varied ages
 Rate of growth of each facial region
 Growth completion of each region
 Times of maturation
www.indiandentalacademy.com
 Diagnosis of dysmorphology
 Treatment of syndromic patients
 In cosmetic surgery
 Reconstructive surgery
 Ortyhognathic surgery
www.indiandentalacademy.com
In forensic medicine
 Identification of missing children
age 8 age 18
www.indiandentalacademy.com

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Anthropology diagnosis

  • 2. ANTHROPOLOGY Anthropos + logos - Anthropology Anthropo- Human logos - Science “ANTHROPOLOGIST” - ARISTOTLE www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 3. DEFINITIONS KROEBER – Anthropology is the science of groups of men and their behavior and production. JACOBS & STERN – Anthropology is the scientific study of the physical, social, and cultural development and behavior of human beings since their appearance on the earth. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 4. Classification of anthropology  PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY  CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 5. PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY 1. HUMAN GENETICS 2. HUMAN PALEONTOLOGY 3. ETHNOLOGY 4. ANTHROPOMETRY 5. BIOMETRY www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 6. CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY 1. PREHISTORIC ANTHROPOLOGY 2. SOCIAL ANTHROPOLOGY www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 7. PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY Physical anthropology is concerned with man as a physical organism in ‘time’ & ‘space’  Study of the man through evolutionary processes  study of human populations BEALS & HOIJER – The study of processes where by man developed from his non human ancestors and the continuing process of change still slowly altering his bodily form. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 8. PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY HUMAN GENETICS E.C.COLIN – Genetics is the branch of biology which deals with the laws and principles of heredity and variation as observed in plants, in animals and in human. HUMAN PALEONTOLOGY Webster’s New International Dictionary – Human paleontology is the science that deals with life of the past geographical periods. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 9. PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY ETHNOLOGY S.S DUBE – Ethnology is a comparative study of the races and culture of mankind in their different aspects. ANTHROPOMETRY HERSKOVITS – The measurements of man BIOMETRY CHARLES WINIK – Biometry is the statistical analysis of biological studies specially as applied to such areas as disease, birth, growth, and death. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 10. Cultural anthropology E.A . HOEBEL – Culture is the sum total of learned behavioral patterns . 1. PREHISTORIC ARCHEOLOGY BEALS & HOIJER – It deals with ancient cultures and with past phases of modern civilization. . www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 11. Cultural anthropology 2. SOCIAL ANTHROPOLOGY CHARLES WINIK – Social anthropology is the study of social behavior especially from the point of view of the systematic comparative study of social forms and institutions. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 12. Human evolution PRIMATOLOGY PRIMATE PALEONTOLOGY Mammal Protheria Theria Metatheria Eutheria Primate www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 13. Characteristics of primates 1. Limbs - prehensile 2. Thumb / great toe 3. Nails - grasping function 4. Teeth - adopted for mixed food 5. Mammary gland - lactation 6. Brain - well developed 7. Clavicle www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 14. Classification of primates  Prosimian  anthropoidea www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 15. Classification of primates 1. Prosimian primates ( 60 mil years ) a. lemuroidea - lemur, loris b. torsoidea - torsier  Earliest true primates  Well developed cerebellar cortices  Limbs had highly mobile joints  Unspecialised tooth cusps  Dental formula – I 2/2 C1/1 PM 3/3 M3/3 www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 16. ANTHROPOIDEA 1. Ceboidea ( Platyrrhine of New World Monkeys) 2. Cercopithecoidea ( Catarrine Of Old World Monkeys ) 3. Hominoidea www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 17. ANTHROPOIDEA CEBOIDEA – ( spider monkey )  The higher primates Dental formula – I 2/2, C1/1, PM2/2, M3/3  4 blunt cusps on molars www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 18. ANTHROPOIDEA Cercopithecidae –( Macaque monkey ) 1. Arboreal in their habits 2. Non prehensile tails 3. Dental formula – I2/2, C1/1, PM2/2, M3/3 www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 19. HOMINOIDEA Hominoidea is further sub divided into  Pongids  Australopithecines www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 20. ANTHROPOIDEA Pongids ( Great apes ) Ex : Gibbons, Gorillas, Orang-utans, Chimpanzees  Large brains  Pelvic girdle & legs became more robust  Orangutans remained arboreal  Chimpanzees, gorillas are quadripedal www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 21. HOMINOIDS AUSTRALOPITHECINES First bipedal fossil anthropoids found in rocks of Eastern & South Africa ( 1-3.6 mil years ago ) HOMO ERUCTUS ( Upright man ) HOMOSAPIENS HOMOSAPIENS SAPIENS NIANDERTHALENSIS ( Cro-magnon man ) ( Neanderthal man )www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 22. Neanderthal man skull-Very large -Dolico cephalic -Face is highly developed with maxillay prognathism -Lower jaw is strong & large -chin is less prominent -human dentition -canine is of ordinary size www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 23. Cro-magnon man Skull–large & massive -face is short, and flat -maxillary region shows less marked prognathism -lower jaw is strong & not massive -a well marked chin www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 24. MODERN MAN Final steps to modern man ( 20 mil years ) 1. Remarkable increase in brain size gave the forehead a more domed appearance 2. Folding of cerebral cortex 3. Bipedal walking 4. Use of hands for manipulation 5. Occipital ridges became small www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 25. MODERN MAN 7. Simplification of nasal region 8. Reduced prognathism 9. Chin increased in prominence 10. Angle between base of the skull and cervical vertebrae is 900 www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 26. Evolution of human face Face is the seat of principle sense organs In lower vertebrates No fully ossified skeleton Jaw muscles are merely modified gill arch muscles Teeth are specialisations of tough shagreen or skin with minute calcified papillae or denticles In the amphibians The bony plates behind the jaws have disappeared, leaving an exposed area –orbit notch www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 27. In the fossil, mammal like reptiles The bony mask of the temporal region is perforated Complex dentary – lower jaw Dentary becomes enlarged & presses external pterygoid muscle, forming the cushion – meniscus ( glenoid fossa ) Heat regulating devices Forward migration of neck muscles Bony mask was replaced by skin www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 28. FACIAL FORM Each person’s face is a custom made original Anthropologists can reconstructs the face from a dry skull The biologic rationale underlying common variations : 1. Different facial types 2. Male & female developmental facial differences 3. Child & adult facial differences www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 29. Head form Two general extremes  Dolicocephalic ( long, narrow ) leptoprosopic  Brachycephalic ( Wide, short, globular ) euryprosopic www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 30. DOLICOCEPHALIC  Nose is longer & Protrusive with Aquiline type of Nasal contour  Convex profile  Cheek bones are less prominent  Longer, narrower, & deeper maxillary arch & palate  Downward & backward rotation of the mandible  Receding chin www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 31. BRACHYCEPHALIC  Nose is protrusively shorter (rounded tip )  Prominent cheek bones  Concave / straight profile  Wider, shorter and more shallow palate and maxillary arch  Mandible is more protrusive  More prominent chin www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 32. DINARIC HEAD FORM Dinaric Alps, Yugoslavia “Brachycephalised dolicocephalic” Flattened occipital regions Bossing of parietal regions Skull has triangular configuration Fore head is sloping & the profile tending towards orthognathic Mandible tends to be less retrusive www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 33. Male versus female features  Size & configuration of the nose  Fore head  Cheek bones  upper jaw look more prominent in females www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 34. Child versus adult features  Nasal part is small  Dentition ( primary & permanent )  Jaw bones (masticatory musles & airway) Head form Sexual dimorphism www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 35. Child versus adult features Child’s face is not a miniature of the adult face 1. Forehead 2. Face appears diminutive in child 3. Nasal region 4. Eyes appears wide set 5. Mandible is small 6. chin is incompletely formed www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 36. Evolution of teeth Lobe finned fishes - upper & lower jaws had bone bearing plates ( labyrinthodont ) - peg formed teeth Reptiles & mammals  teeth are set in separate sockets  cone shaped canines  milk teeth & permanent teeth www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 37. RACE “A group that differs from other classes or human group by virtue of some specific physiological characteristics that are found uniformly within that group” - Maclver & page www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 38. RACIAL CLASSIFICATION Important characters used for racial determination :  skin colour  hair  head form  face  nose  eye  stature  blood groups www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 39. CLASSIFICATION CATEGORIES OF CRITERIA  COMMON VARIABLE CHARACTERS  COMMON PHYSIOLOGICAL CHARACTERS  RARE GENETIC CHARACTERS www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 40. RACIAL CLASSIFICATION 1. NEGROID 2. CAUCASOID 3. MANGOLOID AUSTRALOIDS www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 41. NEGROIDS African negroes & oceanic negros  woolly or frizzly hair on the head  Black coloured skin  Nose is broad and flat  Lips are thick and everted  Facial prognathism  Brow ridges are small www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 42. MANGOLOID PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS  Black, straight, coarse hair  Yellowish brown colour skin  Broad flat face with prominent cheek bones  Mangoloid fold www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 43. MANGOLOIDS 1. CLASSIC / CENTRAL MANGOLOID -Northern Chaina, Tibet& Mangolia 2. ARCTIC / ESKIMOID -Northern Asia, arctic coast of north America 3. INDONESIAN - MALAY MANGOLOID -Japan, Thailand, Southern China 4. AMERICAN INDIAN -North, Middle, and South America www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 44. CAUCASOID Skin – fair, olive & all shades of brown Hair – flat, wavy to various degrees of curliness Head form –dolicocephalic to brachycephalic Nose – leptorrhine to mesorrhine Jaws –no prognathism Chin - pronounced www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 45. CAUCASOIDS 1. MEDITERRANEAN- all sea shores ( India, Spain, Portugal, France etc. ) 2. NORDIC – Scandinavians, Northern Germany, Northern France 3. ALPINE – Central Europe 4. EAST BALTIC – North eastern Germany, Poland, Baltic states 5. DINARIC –Dinaric alps region in Yugoslavia www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 46. CAUCASOIDS 6. ARMENOIDS – turkey, Syria,Palestine Iraq, Iran 7. CELTIC – Iceland, Scotland and western Europe 8. LAPP – Norway, Sweden 9. INDO-DRAVIDIAN –south & central India 10. POLYNESIAN – Polynesian islands of the pacific e.g. New Zealand 11. AINU – ancient stock of Japan www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 47. Australoids They closely resemble the Caucasoids in many characters 1. Australian aborigins -Australia 2. Pre-Dravidian ( veddoid )- South and central India including Typical Indian tribes www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 48. Races in india Sir Herbert Risley ( > 75 yrs ) Based on Indo-Aryans ( west ) mangoloids ( east)  Dravidian  Indo Aryan  Mangoloid www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 49. RACES IN INDIA Based on the measurements on the samples of indian population – Risley 1. Turko- iranian – they inhabitat the Baluchistan ( now in Pakistan ). Tall in nature& brachycephalic 2. Indo- aryan – eastern part of Punjab Rajastan & Kashmir. Tall & fair complexioned 3. Scytho-dravidian- hilly traces of Madhya pradesh, & Coorg. Medium statured & Brachycephalic www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 50.  Aryo- dravidian – U.P. Rajastan & Bihar. Short statured & mesocephalic  Mangolo- dravidian- Bengal & Orissa Stature is medium & sometimes short, round headed with medium nose  Mangoloid – Himalayan regions ( Nepal, Bhutan, Assam, & North eastern states www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 51. Dental anthropology Beginning - Eighties of 18th century Recognised - 20th century Founder of american journal of physical anthropology – Ales Hrdlicka The term dental anthropology was used in early 1900s www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 52. Different aspects of anthropology ( applied anthropology )  Dental development  Dental pathology  Dental morphology  Forensic odontology  odontometry www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 53. DENTAL DEVELOPMENT Tooth eruption standards which are relatively independent of general body growth and skeletal maturation are of great significance in the diagnosis & treatment planning of children with growth disturbances protein-calorie malnutrition ( PCM ) www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 54. PATHOLOGY Dental caries – it is a pathologic condition of the teeth resulting in the decalcification of the dentin, enamel and the disintegration of the remaining organic material often leading to the loss of teeth. Caries susceptibility expresses the inherent or acquired proneness to caries Low incidence of caries in the prehistoric as also in the living tribal communities – coarse & fibrous food products www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 55. DENTAL MORPHOLOGY Teeth are best preserved & most easily accessible anatomical system of the body. pioneering studies – Hrdlicka, Dahlberg, Campbell, Hellmen, Krogman, Moorrees etc. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 56. 1.Supernumerary teeth or hyperdontia - causes dental disturbances by interfering with normal eruption - either peg shaped or have large crown - Higher frequency in the maxilla -Campbell conducted a study on the skulls and living Australian aborigines.(1.8% ) www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 57. 2.Carabelli’s cusp or anomaly Von Carabelli in 1842 Its occurrence – back to paleolithic man An elevation or tubercle on the lingual surface of the mesio-lingual cusp of the maxillary molars particularly the first one A marker for differentiation between different ethnic groups. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 58. 3.Shovel-shaped incisors “SHOVELLING” – Muhlreiter ( 1870 ) A condition resulting from a combination of a concave lingual surface and elevated mesial and distal marginal ridges enclosing a central fossa in the upper and lower incisor teeth Hrdlicka ( 1911 ) had done pioneering work in dental anthropology and reported pronounced shovelling in the incisors of american indians www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 59. Acco. to Hrdlicka – 4 grades of shovelling 1. Shovel- enamel rim has well developed fossa 2. Semi shovel- enamel rim is distinct but with shallower fossa 3. Trace shovel- enamel rim has distinct traces 4. No shovel- enamel rim has no fossa HELLMAN –marked, medium, trace, and absent www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 60. 4.Diastema It is a space or gap present between the maxillary central incisors or between the lateral incisors and canines Former – median diastema (combined with small laterla incisors or large labial frenum) Latter – lateral diastema (found in anthropoid apes & certain fossil men ) www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 61. 5. Crowding Lasker – inheritence of large teeth from one parent and a small jaw from the other 6. Cingulum or lingual cusp A shelf or swelling which is found on the tooth just above the central line Site of development of many supernumerary cusps www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 62. 7. Occlusion Relationship between the masticatory surfaces of the maxillary and mandibular teeth when the mouth is closed -heriditory factors -environmental factors The term ‘malocclusion’ is illdefined and biased - corrucini & whitley www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 63. 1. Overjet – normal (2-4mm), - positive (>5mm) - extreme positive(>7mm) - negative, extreme negative 2. Overbite- 3. Posterior cross bite 4.buccal segment relation www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 64. FORENSIC ODONTOLOGY Deals with the identification & study of human teeth identification of a person involved in mass disasters ( autobobile/aircraft accidents, floods, building collapse and industrial hazards) www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 65. ODONTOMETRY Tooth size standards based on odontometry can be used in the age & sex determination of skeletal and also living population Studies – males have larger teeth (mesio distal crown diameters ) - canines show greatest amount of sexual dimorphism -Europeans have smaller teeth than mangolians or other racial groups www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 66. Dr.V. Rami reddy conducted a retrospective cross sectional study on population of Gulbarga disrtict (1971-1975) 1. Eruptiion pattern 2. Dental caries 3. Dental morphology . . www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 67. AIMS & OBJECTIVES 1. To indicate the general and detailed eruption pattern of different types of deciduous and permanent teeth by variables such as sex, age and economic status. 2. To indicate the general and detailed prevalence of caries in both deciduous & permanent teeth by above variables 3. To indicate the general & detailed frequency occurrence of various morphological traits. www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 68. Deciduous & permanent dental eruption  The times of onset as well as completion of eruption are earlier in females than males  Mandibular teeth precedes over maxillary teeth in both sexes  Teeth eruption is fast in higher income group children www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 69. Dental caries – deciduous dentition By sex  Male children (33.4%)>female children( 26.8% ) By income  Lower income group > upper income group By age  Central incisors –5 years  Lateral incisors – 3 years  Canines – 6 years  First & second molars – 7 to 10 years www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 70. Dental caries – permanent dentition By sex  Difference is insignificant (females > males ) By income  Upper income group > middle & lower By age  Incisors – 22 to 23 years  Canines – free from the disease  Premolars & molars – 22-23 years www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 71. Dental morphology Supernumerary teeth Permanent dentition ( 0.86% ) > deciduous dentition ( 0.06% ) Maxilla > mandible – Ruffer ( 1920 ) Carabelli’s anomaly 35% out of total deciduous teeth& 27% of permanent dentition Female > male www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 72. Dental morphology Crowding both dentitions Female > male Diastema Deciduous teeth > permanent teeth -Male > female www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 73. “Epidemological transition” Phenomenon of changes in frequencies of certain serious diseases – omeron (1971) ‘diseases of civilisation’ or ‘western diseases’ – Trowell & Burkitt www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 74. “Epidemolodic transition in minor diseases”  Chronic allergy – cow’s milk, dust, pollution and food additives  Oral breathing – facial collapse syndrome - narrowing of the upper arch - buccal cross bites www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 75. Bite force studies normal adult chewing – 15-17kg of force maximum - 28-39kg of force Bite force is relevant to the functional aspects of dento-facial dysplasia. Ordinary chewing and maximum bite forces were significantly higher among more traditional rural Punjabi youths than among urban youths - Corruccini & Kaul www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 77.  Solution is the restoration of proper function by means of chewing hard , fibrous foods – stimulate the masticatory apparatus - greater flow of the alkaline saliva www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 78. Evolution of teeth  Non mammalian vertebrates – Polyphyodonty  During growth of the animal – increase in the jaw size is associated with tooth size (Trout – number will increase )  In mammals –Diphyodonty (2 dentitions ) www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 79. Dentition of fishes ( agnatha ) EX; Sea lamprey  No true calcified teeth  Arranged circumferentially  Horny teeth are also seen on the tongue www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 80. Chondrichthyes (bony fishes )  All types of dental specialisations  Homodont & polyphyodont  Teeth are covered by enameloid lower jaw of shark www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 81. osteochthyes  Haplodont – prehention  Polyphyodont  Teeth- vomer, palatine bones roof of the mouth & tongue www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 82. Amphibia  Small, homodont, polyphyodont – prehension  In the frog – small teeth on the upper jaw & no teeth on the lower jaw www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 83. Reptiles  Homodont & polyphyodont  Tend to be tricuspid or cone shaped  Egg teeth – in embryos of lizards & snakes - used to break the shell www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 84. Dentition of mammals  Heterodont ( 4 types )  Restricted to 2 rows  Ability to masticate – improves digestive efficiency for high rate of metabolism www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 85. Other features  TMJ articulation  Salivary glands  Prismatic enamel  Diphyodonty  Secondary palate  Significant muscle development www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 86. Dentition of protheria  Spiny ant eater – edentulous  Duck bulled platypus – 3 functional posterior teeth in each jaw quadrant  A No. additional teeth develop but do not erupt or resorb www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 87. Metatheria  An unusual feature – only last premolar will have a successor  Anteriorly many teeth are present but not functional  Morphology is same with placental animals  Dental formula – 3/3, 0/0, 1/1, 4/4 www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 88. Eutheria  Insectivoral Ex; hedge hog  Molars – primitive trabacular form with sharp, high cusps which interdigitate with those of the opposite jaw  Suitable for crushing the shells of insects www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 89. Rodentia Ex; rat  Heterogenous  Continuously growing incisors  DF 1/1, 0/0. 0/0, 3/3 www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 90. Carnivora  Enlarged canines – offensive weapons  More prominent specialisations are in cat family www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 91. Primates Prosimian Ex; lemur Herbivorous & insectivorous DF – 2/2, 1/1, 3/3, 3/3 Lower incisors & canines are prominent mid line diastema www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 92. Anthropoidea  Macaca monkey  DF – 2/2, 1/1, 2/2, 3/3  Canines are long & prominent ( esp. in male )  Lateral diastema www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 93. Differences between apes & man Apes man  ‘U’ shaped arches parabolic  Edge to edge overlap of upper & incisor relation lower incisors  Male canines are no sexual dimorphism large  Lateral diastema no lateral diastema  Pointed cusps rounded cusps www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 94. ANTHROPOSCOPY Anthropos – human Skopein - examine  Judging the body by inspection  Cannot be expressed numerically  Head must be in the rest position – the relationship of paired features will be assessed www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 95. Criteria for judgment  examiner’s esthetic perception & experience  Paired features are judged for level, contour & size www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 96. Qualitative signs  Head 1.Hairline – distinctive, indistinctive 2.Forehead – unilaterally protruding forehead www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 97. Face 1. FACIAL PROFILE – Normal Bird like Dish like www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 98. Shape of the face Proportionate Long& short& narrow wide www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 99. Shape of the face square triangular trapezoid www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 100. Facial mid axis quality In midline concave with dislocated chin www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 102. ANTHROPOMETRY “It is a systematised art of measuring and taking observations of man, his skeleton, his brain or other organs, by the most reliable means and methods for scientific purposes” -ALES HRDLICKA www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 103. Anthropos -human & metron -measure Anthropometry represents the typical and traditional tool of physical anthropology Johann Friedrich Blumenbach (1752-1840) 3 types of head form 1. Square 2. Long 3. Laterally compressed www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 104. Broca, Flower, Turner further developed the study of the skulls on the foundations laid by Blumenbach Father of Anthropometry – BROCA Broca’s methods were universal until 1870 In 1874, Ihering pointed out the weaknesses in Broca’s method craniometric conferences were held at Munich(1877) and Berlin(1880) www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 105. Kollmann, Ranke, and Virchow prepared a scheme for craniometric techniques. This was presented and approved at the 13th general congress of the German Anthropological Society held at Frankfurt (1882) www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 106. SUBDIVISIONS OF ANTHROPOMETRY  SOMATOMETRY -Living body including head and face  Osteometry -Skeletal long and short bones  Craniometry -Skull  Physiometry -Bodily & mental functions www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 107. MEASURING TOOLS & TECHNIQUES REQUISITES 1. Should be accurate 2. Not easily distorted 3. Handy or easy to manipulate 4. Easily transportable for field work www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 108. sliding caliper - it measures the linear projective distances between 2 land marks in the same plane Ex; eye fissure length,mouth width The standard instruments www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 109. 2. Spreading caliper When the projective linear distance has to be determined between distant surfaces and various planes Ex; length of the head & width of the head www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 110. Soft metric tape Used for determining the tangential linear distances taken along the skin surface between 2 land marks Ex; maxillary & mandibular arcs of the face www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 111. Large double sliding calipers with levels –used when measuring projective distances involving the vertex and the opisthocranion land marks of the head www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 112. Measuring tools with various modifications  Nose deviation protractor  Nostril inclination protractor  Nasal root and alar- slope angle meter www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 113. Multipurpose facial angle meter  Pointed portion –measuring nasofrontal,nasolabial, mentolabial angles  Small & large forked portions – determining the nasal tip & mentocervical angles www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 115. Selection of subjects Selection will be on the basis of  Blood – 1.between individuals of same race 2. Between individuals of different race  Normalcy – pathologic conditions & anomalies alter the size, shape, & other characters ( rachtis, pagets disease, & clefts )  Age & sex www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 116.  Age – 1. Eruption of teeth 2. Union of epiphysis 3. Condition of teeth 4. Condition of cranial structures - sutures 5. General condition of the weight of the bones www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 117. Positioning the subject Subjects to be seated in the dental chair with the head resting on the head support Head of the examiner must be level with the head of the subject Standard orientation of the head –FH plane  Projective measurements www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 118. FACIAL MID LINE 3 anatomic points  The nasion ( root of the nose )  The subnasale (base of the columella )  The gnathion / menton (lower edge of the mandible www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 119. Land marks ‘Certain anatomic points used to take body measurements’ Short abbreviations used instead of full names ( small letters ) ex; nasion – n Land marks may have similar name but differ in location Ex; porion To avoid errors – they should be marked on the skin www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 120. Head  Vertex – highest point of the head  Glabella – most prominent midline point between eyebrows  Opisthocranion – most posterior point of the line of greatest head length  Eurion – the most prominent lateral point on each side of the skull www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 122. Measurements of head region HORIZONTAL HEAD POSITION 1. Width of the head – eu to eu 2. Width of the forehead - ft to ft 3. Skull base width - t to t www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 123. Perpendicular head position 1. Height of the culvarium – v-tr 2. Anterior height of the head v-n 3. Specific height of the head – v-en 4. Height of the head & nose – v to sn 5. Combined height of the head & face – v to gn www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 124.  Length of the head g to op  Circumference of the head www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 125. Face  Width of the face zy to zy  Width of the mandible go to go www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 126.  Height of the upper profile – tr to prn  Height of the lower profile – prn to gn  Lower half of the cranio- facial height – en to gn www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 127. Facial arc measurements  Supra-orbital arc  Maxillary arc  Mandibular arc www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 128.  Height of the mandibular ramus – go to cdl  Depth of the body go to gn www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 129. Depth measurements of the face 1. Tragion-glabellar depth 2. Tragion-nasion depth 3. Tragion-subnasaledepth 4. Tragion-gnathion depth www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 130. Nose  Nasofrontal angle Angle between the proximal nasal bridge contour and the anterior surface of the forehead below the glabella www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 131.  Nasal tip angle Angle between columella & nasal bridge www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 132.  Naso labial angle ( septolabial angle or columella labial angle) Angle between columella & upper lip skin www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 133. Lips & mouth  Width of the mouth ( inter commisural distance ) ch to ch www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 134.  Upper lip height Sn to sto  Height of the skin portion of the upper lip sn to ls  Height of the skin portion of the lower lip li to sl  Lower lip height - sto to sl www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 135.  Vermilion height of the upper lip ls to sto  Vermilion height of the lower lip sto to li www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 136.  Labio mental angle – between skin surface of the lower lip and the surface contour of the chin www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 137. Sources of errors in anthropometry & anthroposcopy Commonest sources of error:  Improper identification of landmarks  Inadequate use of measuring equipment  Improper measuring technique www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 138. anthropometry Improper identification of land marks: Soft tissue land marks – easy to locate in a healthy person’ face & difficult in a deformed face Bony land marks – palpation easy to locate – orbitale difficult to locate – gonion In congenitally deformed faces – reference to adjacent structures www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 139. Head  Vertex – depends upon the FH plane  Eurion – difficult to locate on irregular surface  Glabella – replaced by a point in the mid axis of the face at the level of the upper ridge of the eyebrows  Trichion – difficult to locate in early childhood, & at the first stages of baldness www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 140. Face  Zygion – difficult to locate in 1st & 2nd brachial arch syndromes  Gonion – difficult if they are covered with thick skin & hypo plastic mandible  Pogonion – difficult in receding chin & ‘falso pogonion protrusion’  Gnathion – markedly receding lower jaw www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 141. Nose  Nasion – difficult after injuries, noses with silastic implants, deep naso-frontal angle  Subnasale – at the bottom of the curve of the curve but difficult to locate in sharp angle  Pronasale – best viewed from profile difficult in bifid nose with uneven tip heights www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 142. Lips & mouth  Stomion – mid point of the labial fissure dislocated mouth- philtrum  Labrale superious – position varies after surgery of cleft lip  Chelion – points at right & left commisures of the labial fissure difficult in older patients because of a fine shallow ridge of the skin repeated inspection www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 143. Problems with measuring tools  Standard measurements are not used  If they are used improperly  examiner should be familiar with the areas  Accuracy varies with instruments sliding calipers – accurate sliding calipers – up to 3mm error tape –shortens the distance when pressed & should be tightened to eliminate the effect of the hair fabric tape follows the contours of the face www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 144. Improper measuring technique  POSITION OF THE HEAD – improper measurements ( especially projective measurements )  Head tends to return to the rest position during examination – must be checked before measurement  50 to 100 of error in inclination  In patients with asymmetric FHs, the difference between two horizontals must be assessed Farkas – left FH is closer to the rest position www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 145. FACIAL MID LINE – border between right & left halves Errors can be made in judging the facial asymmetry Nasion is the most stable point The heights will be changed with expressions on the face ( crying, smiling ) www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 146. Anthroposcopy  Errors result from 1. Incorrect positioning of the patient’s head 2. Wrong angle of view of the examiner’s eyes 3. Poor lighting 4. Poor esthetic assessment & talent www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 147. Head Visual judgment of the height of the fore head depends on the 1. Position of the head during inspection 2. Inclination of the fore head 3. Position of the ears Face  Lower face height would appear small in the presence of a receding mandible www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 148. Lips & mouth Frontal view – size of the upper lip depends on the naso-labial angle & the position of the skin surface Curved nasolabial angle & protruding skin – short upper lip Vertical upper lip & obtuse angle – longer lip www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 151. Anthropometry in cleft lip & palate patients  Combined orthodontic & surgical treatment  Poor esthetics and nasal deformity ( displacement of the soft tissue elements )  Esthetics – no uniform definition  Goals - Balance & harmony  Accepted standards www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 152.  Common technique – visual assessment based on the rating scale - subjective & unreliable  Radiographic cephalometry  Photographs  Physical anthropometry – objective documentation of facial features - determination of need for surgery -comparison of facial features before & after surgery www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 153.  Morphological study of growth patterns of nasolabial region – Farkas  6 measurements in 1593 north American Caucasians ( 1 to 18 yrs )  Age 1 – highest growth of the cutaneous portion of the upper lip & width of the nose  Age 5 – upper lip reaches adult size  Age 14 to 15 – nose is fully developed www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 154. In craniomaxillo- facial surgery “Anthropometry is the objective analysis that replaces subjective judgement”  Mean , standard deviations of key facial measurements at varied ages  Rate of growth of each facial region  Growth completion of each region  Times of maturation www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 155.  Diagnosis of dysmorphology  Treatment of syndromic patients  In cosmetic surgery  Reconstructive surgery  Ortyhognathic surgery www.indiandentalacademy.com
  • 156. In forensic medicine  Identification of missing children age 8 age 18 www.indiandentalacademy.com