Determination of age in the Japanese monkey from growth layers in the dental cementum |
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Authors: | K. Wada N. Ohtaishi N. Hachiya |
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Affiliation: | (1) Primate Research Institute, Kyoto University, Inuyama, 484 Aichi, Japan;(2) Department of Oral Anatomy, School of Dentistry, Hokkaido University, 060 Sapporo, Japan |
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Abstract: | The teeth of 14 Japanese monkeys (Macaca fuscata) were examined to establish an exact method of determining age by histological observation of dental cementum. The cementum
showed annual growth layers, which were especially remarkable in the incisor root and in the molar cementum deposited at the
junction of the roots. The layer of cementum formed in winter appears as a dark layer in stained sections and as a translucent
layer in unstained ground sections. In the incisor the first dark and light layers are formed at the age of three years, whereas
in the molar they do not appear at a definite age. The layers are thick and clear in the upper medial incisor. As a result,
the age of a Japanese monkey can be determined by adding two to the number of dark layers and an outer light layer.
It is interesting that the formation of the cementum of the first molar begins a few years after its eruption. The relation
between this fact and the pressure of occlusion is discussed. |
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