Occlusal fissures in equine cheek teeth : μCT and histological findings
- Author
- Elke Pollaris, Carsten Staszyk, Kirsten Proost, Matthieu Boone (UGent) , Iván Josipovic (UGent) , Bart Pardon (UGent) and Lieven Vlaminck (UGent)
- Organization
- Project
- Abstract
- Fissures on the occlusal surface of equine cheek teeth are commonly encountered during oral examination. Generally, their presence is considered abnormal but their aetiopathogenesis and clinical impact on pulp disease is still undetermined. The aims of this research were to study the extent of occlusal cheek teeth fissures using high-resolution X-ray computed tomography (mu CT) imaging and their histological characteristics. Twenty-seven teeth (of 15 horses) were scanned using mu CT imaging to analyse fissure extent. Histological examination of a subset of teeth (n = 7) was performed. Forty-three type 1 fissures (35 type 1a, eight type 1b) were identified. The mean length of the fissure of type la and type 1b on the occlusal surface was 3.47 +/- 1.60 mm and 13.64 +/- 7.40 mm, respectively. Their mean depth was 13.22 +/- 10.76 mm and 7.42 +/- 6.42 mm, respectively. Potential risk factors associated with fissure depth were identified using a multivariable mixed model The location of the fissure and Triadan number were significantly associated with fissure depth. Fissures could be identified on histological sections with the presence of organic material inside the fissure, microorganisms in the continuation of the fissure extending into the dentinal tubules and the presence of reactionary dentine. This study suggests that fissures can provide a pathway for microorganisms to enter the dentinal tubules, potentially resulting in local pulpal inflammation. It appears that in healthy teeth, vital odontoblasts react by producing reactionary (tertiary) dentin, which lacks patent tubules and thus provides a proper seal. (C) 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
- Keywords
- Animal Science and Zoology, General Veterinary, Equine dentistry, Fracture, Imaging, Molars, Pulpitis, APICAL INFECTIONS, ETIOPATHOLOGICAL FINDINGS, PART 3, HORSES, FRACTURES, PREVALENCE, ENDOSCOPY, DISEASE
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Citation
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication: http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-8662731
- MLA
- Pollaris, Elke, et al. “Occlusal Fissures in Equine Cheek Teeth : ΜCT and Histological Findings.” VETERINARY JOURNAL, vol. 255, 2020, doi:10.1016/j.tvjl.2019.105421.
- APA
- Pollaris, E., Staszyk, C., Proost, K., Boone, M., Josipovic, I., Pardon, B., & Vlaminck, L. (2020). Occlusal fissures in equine cheek teeth : μCT and histological findings. VETERINARY JOURNAL, 255. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tvjl.2019.105421
- Chicago author-date
- Pollaris, Elke, Carsten Staszyk, Kirsten Proost, Matthieu Boone, Iván Josipovic, Bart Pardon, and Lieven Vlaminck. 2020. “Occlusal Fissures in Equine Cheek Teeth : ΜCT and Histological Findings.” VETERINARY JOURNAL 255. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tvjl.2019.105421.
- Chicago author-date (all authors)
- Pollaris, Elke, Carsten Staszyk, Kirsten Proost, Matthieu Boone, Iván Josipovic, Bart Pardon, and Lieven Vlaminck. 2020. “Occlusal Fissures in Equine Cheek Teeth : ΜCT and Histological Findings.” VETERINARY JOURNAL 255. doi:10.1016/j.tvjl.2019.105421.
- Vancouver
- 1.Pollaris E, Staszyk C, Proost K, Boone M, Josipovic I, Pardon B, et al. Occlusal fissures in equine cheek teeth : μCT and histological findings. VETERINARY JOURNAL. 2020;255.
- IEEE
- [1]E. Pollaris et al., “Occlusal fissures in equine cheek teeth : μCT and histological findings,” VETERINARY JOURNAL, vol. 255, 2020.
@article{8662731,
abstract = {{Fissures on the occlusal surface of equine cheek teeth are commonly encountered during oral examination. Generally, their presence is considered abnormal but their aetiopathogenesis and clinical impact on pulp disease is still undetermined. The aims of this research were to study the extent of occlusal cheek teeth fissures using high-resolution X-ray computed tomography (mu CT) imaging and their histological characteristics. Twenty-seven teeth (of 15 horses) were scanned using mu CT imaging to analyse fissure extent. Histological examination of a subset of teeth (n = 7) was performed.
Forty-three type 1 fissures (35 type 1a, eight type 1b) were identified. The mean length of the fissure of type la and type 1b on the occlusal surface was 3.47 +/- 1.60 mm and 13.64 +/- 7.40 mm, respectively. Their mean depth was 13.22 +/- 10.76 mm and 7.42 +/- 6.42 mm, respectively. Potential risk factors associated with fissure depth were identified using a multivariable mixed model The location of the fissure and Triadan number were significantly associated with fissure depth. Fissures could be identified on histological sections with the presence of organic material inside the fissure, microorganisms in the continuation of the fissure extending into the dentinal tubules and the presence of reactionary dentine. This study suggests that fissures can provide a pathway for microorganisms to enter the dentinal tubules, potentially resulting in local pulpal inflammation. It appears that in healthy teeth, vital odontoblasts react by producing reactionary (tertiary) dentin, which lacks patent tubules and thus provides a proper seal. (C) 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.}},
articleno = {{105421}},
author = {{Pollaris, Elke and Staszyk, Carsten and Proost, Kirsten and Boone, Matthieu and Josipovic, Iván and Pardon, Bart and Vlaminck, Lieven}},
issn = {{1090-0233}},
journal = {{VETERINARY JOURNAL}},
keywords = {{Animal Science and Zoology,General Veterinary,Equine dentistry,Fracture,Imaging,Molars,Pulpitis,APICAL INFECTIONS,ETIOPATHOLOGICAL FINDINGS,PART 3,HORSES,FRACTURES,PREVALENCE,ENDOSCOPY,DISEASE}},
language = {{eng}},
pages = {{7}},
title = {{Occlusal fissures in equine cheek teeth : μCT and histological findings}},
url = {{http://doi.org/10.1016/j.tvjl.2019.105421}},
volume = {{255}},
year = {{2020}},
}
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