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1  and represents failure to develop 1 or more permanent teeth.
2  complex, particularly in necrotic, immature permanent teeth.
3 tients have a history of delayed eruption of permanent teeth.
4 on of alveolar bone, and loss of primary and permanent teeth.
5 ring extraction of two contralateral erupted permanent teeth.
6 udies examining caries progression in sealed permanent teeth.
7 odontitis resulting in loss of deciduous and permanent teeth.
8 -1.8) tooth surfaces in deciduous but not in permanent teeth.
9 11 erupted permanent teeth, and 14 unerupted permanent teeth.
10 n primary teeth is correlated with caries in permanent teeth.
11  risk indicator for predicting caries in the permanent teeth.
12 on revealed taurodontism in both primary and permanent teeth.
13 e affected with several congenitally missing permanent teeth.
14 mposite resin restorations in primary versus permanent teeth.
15 enotype characterized by delayed eruption of permanent teeth.
16 ial cost of infection or loss of primary and permanent teeth.
17 n and youth ages 5-17 had one or more sealed permanent teeth.
18 d for about 80% of the caries experienced in permanent teeth.
19 reproduce the hybrid layer thickness seen in permanent teeth.
20  set included 46,702 patients and 71,283 RCT permanent teeth.
21 interventions in adults/children and primary/permanent teeth.
22 ximal, or free smooth surfaces in primary or permanent teeth; 3) had a reference standard; and 4) rep
23 er by being taller (14.4 cm) and having more permanent teeth (5.7).
24 and cavitated carious lesions on primary and permanent teeth and 2) adverse events.
25         Humans replace their milk teeth with permanent teeth and then lose their ability for tooth re
26               Tooth agenesis was assessed in permanent teeth and was defined based on the age of the
27 the innervation density of human primary and permanent teeth and whether caries or painful pulpitis w
28 uding postnatal dental pulp stem cells (from permanent teeth) and stem cells from human exfoliated de
29 ion consisted of 7 primary teeth, 11 erupted permanent teeth, and 14 unerupted permanent teeth.
30 t, increased caries, and delayed eruption of permanent teeth are the main complications of drug-induc
31 you lost all of your upper and lower natural permanent teeth?" at 2+ time points between 2006 and 201
32 d the condition of the periapical tissues of permanent teeth based on cone-beam computed tomography (
33 gnosis of tooth decay in either deciduous or permanent teeth, defined as at least 1 decayed, filled,
34 nent teeth (DMFT index) or decayed or filled permanent teeth (DFT index) (mean difference, -0.73 [95%
35                                              Permanent teeth diagnosed with "irreversible pulpitis" h
36 in the number of decayed, missing, or filled permanent teeth (DMFT index) or decayed or filled perman
37 g should be started at least one year before permanent teeth erupt.
38 tin of primary teeth compared with dentin of permanent teeth; however, no information is available re
39  of affected surfaces for both deciduous and permanent teeth in all age groups, even after adjusting
40 disease trajectory of dentinal caries in the permanent teeth in groups defined by the presence or abs
41 gested minor differences between primary and permanent teeth in terms of dentin composition and morph
42 the present study was to compare primary and permanent teeth in terms of the thickness of the hybrid
43 teeth and higher Decayed, Missing and Filled permanent Teeth index (DMFT) were more prevalent among S
44              Sealing non-cavitated caries in permanent teeth is effective in reducing caries progress
45   The long-term outcome of replanted avulsed permanent teeth is frequently compromised by lack of rev
46 he clinical management of non-vital immature permanent teeth is of clinical interest.
47  humans, as opposed to mice, which have only permanent teeth (monophyodont dentition), some of which
48  craniofacial syndromes, prior extraction of permanent teeth, multiple effect size estimates, and stu
49 ies, focusing mainly on adults ( n = 17) and permanent teeth ( n = 24).
50  In modern humans, the occurrence of missing permanent teeth, namely tooth agenesis, is common.
51 er profile of the impact of dental caries on permanent teeth of US adults.
52 and calibrated dentist examiners assessed 28 permanent teeth or tooth spaces for each of 6,767 subjec
53  is significantly thicker in primary than in permanent teeth (p = 0.0001), suggesting that primary to
54 ted with cleft palate (CP) with impaction of permanent teeth (p<10(-6)).
55 al and mid-buccal sites of all fully erupted permanent teeth present in two randomly selected quadran
56                                    Dentin in permanent teeth rarely undergoes resorption in developme
57  human or animal pulpless models in immature permanent teeth, recent studies have highlighted their r
58 times more likely to develop caries in their permanent teeth (relative ratio = 2.6, 95% CI = 1.4-4.7;
59 operative tooth-root development in immature permanent teeth represents a generalized challenge to re
60 tated root carious lesions on primary and/or permanent teeth, respectively (low- to moderate-certaint
61 ssions for untreated caries in deciduous and permanent teeth, respectively, using modeling resources
62 t II, wear findings for primary molar versus permanent teeth, respectively, were as follows (in micro
63  were divided into 4 groups: 5 primary and 5 permanent teeth restored with All-Bond 2/Bisfil P system
64 -Bond 2/Bisfil P system; and 5 primary and 5 permanent teeth restored with Scotchbond Multi-Purpose/Z
65  shorter longevity of endodontically treated permanent teeth than in previous community-based studies
66  and Tay), with a healthy and full set of 28 permanent teeth that had never had any orthodontic treat
67 tified data of patients who underwent RCT of permanent teeth through October 2015 in 99 general denti
68               Using image analysis, we found permanent teeth to be significantly more densely innerva
69 ol-A-diglycidyl-dimethacrylate composite for permanent teeth, urethane-dimethacrylate compomer for pr
70 Nyanzapithecus on the basis of its unerupted permanent teeth, visualized by synchrotron imaging.
71  3.9 billion people, and untreated caries in permanent teeth was the most prevalent condition evaluat
72                 In 2010, untreated caries in permanent teeth was the most prevalent condition worldwi
73                                              Permanent teeth were examined for erosion into dentin, e
74                                  Primary and permanent teeth with C-MIP showed a dysbiotic microbiome
75 ate the overall success rate of pulpotomy in permanent teeth with irreversible pulpitis as a result o
76 mpared the success of direct pulp capping in permanent teeth with MTA (mineral trioxide aggregate) or
77  clinic to obtain apical closure of immature permanent teeth with thin dentinal walls.