Dental lamina

Jump to navigation Jump to search


Overview

WikiDoc Resources for Dental lamina

Articles

Most recent articles on Dental lamina

Most cited articles on Dental lamina

Review articles on Dental lamina

Articles on Dental lamina in N Eng J Med, Lancet, BMJ

Media

Powerpoint slides on Dental lamina

Images of Dental lamina

Photos of Dental lamina

Podcasts & MP3s on Dental lamina

Videos on Dental lamina

Evidence Based Medicine

Cochrane Collaboration on Dental lamina

Bandolier on Dental lamina

TRIP on Dental lamina

Clinical Trials

Ongoing Trials on Dental lamina at Clinical Trials.gov

Trial results on Dental lamina

Clinical Trials on Dental lamina at Google

Guidelines / Policies / Govt

US National Guidelines Clearinghouse on Dental lamina

NICE Guidance on Dental lamina

NHS PRODIGY Guidance

FDA on Dental lamina

CDC on Dental lamina

Books

Books on Dental lamina

News

Dental lamina in the news

Be alerted to news on Dental lamina

News trends on Dental lamina

Commentary

Blogs on Dental lamina

Definitions

Definitions of Dental lamina

Patient Resources / Community

Patient resources on Dental lamina

Discussion groups on Dental lamina

Patient Handouts on Dental lamina

Directions to Hospitals Treating Dental lamina

Risk calculators and risk factors for Dental lamina

Healthcare Provider Resources

Symptoms of Dental lamina

Causes & Risk Factors for Dental lamina

Diagnostic studies for Dental lamina

Treatment of Dental lamina

Continuing Medical Education (CME)

CME Programs on Dental lamina

International

Dental lamina en Espanol

Dental lamina en Francais

Business

Dental lamina in the Marketplace

Patents on Dental lamina

Experimental / Informatics

List of terms related to Dental lamina

The dental lamina is a band of epithelial tissue seen in histologic sections of a developing tooth. The dental lamina is first evidence of tooth development and begins at the sixth week in utero or three weeks after the rupture of the buccopharyngeal membrane. It is formed when cells of the oral ectoderm proliferate faster than cells of other areas. Best described as an in-growth of ectomesenchyme tissue, the dental lamina is frequently distinguished from the vestibular lamina, which develops concurrently. When it is present, the dental lamina connects the developing tooth bud to the epithelium of the oral cavity. Eventually, the dental lamina disintegrates into small clusters of epithelium and is resorbed. In situations when the clusters are not resorbed, eruption cysts are formed over the developing tooth and delay its eruption into the oral cavity.

References

  • Cate, A.R. Ten. Oral Histology: development, structure, and function. 5th ed. 1998. ISBN 0-8151-2952-1.
  • Brand, Richard Isselhard, Donald. Anatomy of Orofacial Structures (Anatomy of Orofacial Structures. Mosby. 7 edition (March 4, 2003). ISBN-10: 0323019544.
  • Bhaskar, S.N. Orban's Oral Histology and Embryology. 11th ed. 1991. ISBN 81-8147-012-5.

Template:WH Template:WikiDoc Sources