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Thread: Ancient Egyptian dental work - photo

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  1. #1
    Supporting Member Altair's Avatar
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    Ancient Egyptian dental work - photo

    Ancient Egyptian dental work model at the National Museum of Dentistry in Baltimore, Maryland.




    Previously:

    Filling a tooth - GIF
    Human teeth nerves - photo
    Mixing dental alginate - GIF
    Denture articulator - photo
    Dental training mannequin - photo
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    mwmkravchenko (May 20, 2023), nova_robotics (May 19, 2023), rlm98253 (May 19, 2023)

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    Supporting Member IntheGroove's Avatar
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    Ouch. That hurts...

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    nova_robotics's Tools
    I'm impressed they had wire of that quality.

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    Supporting Member desbromilow's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by nova_robotics View Post
    I'm impressed they had wire of that quality.
    probably gold wire, or gold alloy - very easy to make wires of reasonable quality, and relatively non-corroding. The wires (like the teeth) would have suffered more from the diet, than the quality of materials.

    my question is how they under cut the jaw - that would have been the effects of the abscess eating into the bone, or it was purposely done to give room under the inserted teeth - either way it would not have been a pleasant experience.

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    nova_robotics (May 19, 2023)

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    nova_robotics's Tools
    Quote Originally Posted by desbromilow View Post
    my question is how they under cut the jaw - that would have been the effects of the abscess eating into the bone, or it was purposely done to give room under the inserted teeth - either way it would not have been a pleasant experience.
    Remove a tooth and leave it for a few years and your jaw will undercut itself. It's actually a really big problem in dentistry because if someone loses a tooth you gotta get on that and repair it. If someone loses a tooth and waits a few years before repairing it there will be no jaw left to install an implant in.

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    Philip Davies (May 20, 2023)

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    Supporting Member TrickieDickie's Avatar
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    The jaw bone will naturally recede when a tooth is lost, nothing to support. Many x-rays of patients with false teeth show the drastic loss of bone support when natural teeth are gone.



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    Supporting Member IntheGroove's Avatar
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    And excellent low speed drill bits...

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