Demirjian Stage Tooth Formation Results from a Large Group of Children

The aim of this study is to present further data on the timing and variation of individual permanent mandibular teeth using Demirjian stages from a large collaboration. Seven mandibular permanent teeth were assessed from dental radiographs of healthy dental patients from Australia, Belgium, Canada,...

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Main Author: Helen M. Liversidge
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dental Anthropology Association 2010-01-01
Series:Dental Anthropology
Online Access:http://journal.dentalanthropology.org/index.php/jda/article/view/66/64
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spelling doaj-7e665f1989eb460c803e1e92c71a78192021-08-20T01:13:16ZengDental Anthropology AssociationDental Anthropology1096-94112010-01-012311624https://doi.org/10.26575/daj.v23i1.66Demirjian Stage Tooth Formation Results from a Large Group of ChildrenHelen M. Liversidge0Queen Mary University of London, Barts and The London School of Medicine and DentistryThe aim of this study is to present further data on the timing and variation of individual permanent mandibular teeth using Demirjian stages from a large collaboration. Seven mandibular permanent teeth were assessed from dental radiographs of healthy dental patients from Australia, Belgium, Canada, England, Finland, France, South Korea and Sweden (cross-sectional study; n = 9,371, 4,710 males, 4,661 females; aged 2–18). Data are presented in three ways, namely by tooth stage for males, females, and pooled sex. Mean age at entry of each tooth formation stage (maturity data) was calculated using logistic regression and modified for age prediction. The 51% confidence interval for age within stage of individual tooth stages was calculated for use in forensic age estimation where the burden of proof is on the balance of probabilities. Average age, standard deviation, standard error, 3rd and 97th percentile within tooth stage was calculated from a uniform age sample (171 for each year of age from 3 to 16, n = 2,394). Modified maturity data and average age within stage from the uniform age distribution are two new methods of age estimation.http://journal.dentalanthropology.org/index.php/jda/article/view/66/64
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Helen M. Liversidge
spellingShingle Helen M. Liversidge
Demirjian Stage Tooth Formation Results from a Large Group of Children
Dental Anthropology
author_facet Helen M. Liversidge
author_sort Helen M. Liversidge
title Demirjian Stage Tooth Formation Results from a Large Group of Children
title_short Demirjian Stage Tooth Formation Results from a Large Group of Children
title_full Demirjian Stage Tooth Formation Results from a Large Group of Children
title_fullStr Demirjian Stage Tooth Formation Results from a Large Group of Children
title_full_unstemmed Demirjian Stage Tooth Formation Results from a Large Group of Children
title_sort demirjian stage tooth formation results from a large group of children
publisher Dental Anthropology Association
series Dental Anthropology
issn 1096-9411
publishDate 2010-01-01
description The aim of this study is to present further data on the timing and variation of individual permanent mandibular teeth using Demirjian stages from a large collaboration. Seven mandibular permanent teeth were assessed from dental radiographs of healthy dental patients from Australia, Belgium, Canada, England, Finland, France, South Korea and Sweden (cross-sectional study; n = 9,371, 4,710 males, 4,661 females; aged 2–18). Data are presented in three ways, namely by tooth stage for males, females, and pooled sex. Mean age at entry of each tooth formation stage (maturity data) was calculated using logistic regression and modified for age prediction. The 51% confidence interval for age within stage of individual tooth stages was calculated for use in forensic age estimation where the burden of proof is on the balance of probabilities. Average age, standard deviation, standard error, 3rd and 97th percentile within tooth stage was calculated from a uniform age sample (171 for each year of age from 3 to 16, n = 2,394). Modified maturity data and average age within stage from the uniform age distribution are two new methods of age estimation.
url http://journal.dentalanthropology.org/index.php/jda/article/view/66/64
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