| Literature DB >> 26693824 |
Xin Ye1, Kunyang Li2, Ling Liu3, Fangfang Yu4, Fu Xiong5, Yun Fan6, Xiangmin Xu7, Chunran Zuo8, Dong Chen9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Dentin dysplasia type I (DD-I) is a rare autosomal dominant hereditary disorder which seriously affects the root development of teeth, causing spontaneous tooth loss (in teenagers). At present, the study of DD-I focuses on familial and phenotypic analyses and reports regarding the ultrastructural study of DD-I are few. The purpose of this study was to clarify and discuss the clinical, histopathological, and ultrastructural features of the dentin defects in DD-I. In addition, the study further explores the root development and provides clues for uncovering virulent genes associated with the disease.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26693824 PMCID: PMC4689058 DOI: 10.1186/s12903-015-0149-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Oral Health ISSN: 1472-6831 Impact factor: 2.757
Fig. 1Intraoral images and panoramic radiographs of individuals. a Intraoral image of a normal subject. b Panoramic radiograph of normal subject. c Intraoral photo of a 47 year old subject affected by DD-. d Panoramic radiograph of a subject affected by DD-I
Fig. 2Clinical and stereomicroscopic observations of normal and DD-I affected teeth. a A deciduous tooth affected by DD-I and (b) a permanent tooth from the subject affected by DD-I. Examples of a (c) normal permanent tooth and (d) a permanent tooth affected by DD-I
Fig. 3LM examination of the teeth specimens. a Ground section of a control permanent tooth (40×). b Ground section of a permanent tooth affected by DD-I: normal-appearing enamel, thin dentin and large pulp filled with irregular organization are present (40×). c Well-demarcated mantle dentin continued with fractured and discontiguous and sparse dentinal tubules were found in deciduous teeth affected by DD-I (100×). d Dentin of a permanent tooth affected by DD-I (400×). e “Stream flowing around boulders” patterns were found in deciduous teeth affected by DD-I (200×). f A permanent tooth affected by DD-I (the arrow indicates a dentin bead) (400×). g Teardrop-shaped lacunae near the cervical enamel were found in permanent teeth affected by DD-I (the arrow indicates a lacuna) (100×)
Fig. 4SEM examination of the teeth specimens. a Regularly arranged dentin tubules were found in normal deciduous teeth (2000×). b Sparsely scattered dentin tubules with reduced diameter were found in deciduous teeth affected by DD-I (2000×). c Dentin tubules in a normal permanent and (d) a permanent tooth affected by DD-I (2000×). e Rodless enamel with black and white horizontal stripes in a permanent tooth affected by DD-I (500×)
Fig. 5TEM examination of the teeth specimens. a Normal inner dentin with orderly dentinal tubules having no sheath-like structures were found in control deciduous teeth (3000×). b Tubules with irregular shape, size, and pattern of organization were found in deciduous teeth affected by DD-I (3000×). c Outer dentinal tubules with sheath-like structures of normal permanent teeth and (d) dentin tubules of permanent teeth affected by DD-I (5000×). e Laminar-type collagen in a normal tooth and (f) ill-defined margins and irregular collagen fibers in a tooth affected by DD-I (15,000×)
Summary of the main results
| Normal permanent teeth | DDI-permanent teeth | Normal deciduous teeth | DDI-deciduous teeth | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Normal crowns | + | + | + | + |
| Rootless teeth | + | + | ||
| Periapical radiolucencies | + | + | ||
| Pulp obliteration | + | + | ||
| Partially obliterated crescent shaped pulp chamber | + | + | ||
| Normal enamel | + | + | + | + |
| Well-demarcated mantle dentin | + | + | + | + |
| Dysplastic dentinal tubules | + | + | ||
| “Stream flowing around boulders” root dentin structure | + | + | ||
| Chaotic collagen fibers | + | + | ||
| Larger scalloped dentinoenamel junctions | + | |||
| Teardrop-shaped lacunae in the enamel | + | |||
| Rodless enamel | + |