The temporomandibular joint (TMJ) and dental occlusion were investigated clinically and radiographically in 59 patients aged 23-83 (mean, 58) years with general joint disease. Forty-nine had rheumatoid arthritis (RA), mostly of long duration. The patients were divided into four groups by type of dentition. Radiographic TMJ abnormality was found in about 4 of 5 patients with RA, in both the dentate and the edentulous group. The abnormality was mainly destructive with productive signs, but in the edentulous group erosive and asymmetrical changes occurred more often. Almost complete restriction of the condylar translation and severely restricted mouth opening (less than or equal to 30 mm) rarely occurred, although the translatory motion was restricted in several patients. Many of these had a satisfactory mouth opening (greater than 40 mm). Occlusal changes-various degrees of anterior bite opening-were reported by about one fourth of both the dentate patients and the complete denture wearers. One patient had occlusal contact on the second molars only. Anterior bite opening occurred only in patients with radiographic TMJ abnormality, including 5 of the 6 patients with complete mandibular head destruction.
Abstract— A radiographic method expressing the alveolar bone level in absolute figures is presented. By means of a calibrated measuring radiographic film fixed to a magnifying viewer, alveolar bone levels were determined directly on intraoral periodic “identical” radiographs. A polyether impression was made for fixation of the filmholder in order to obtain reproducible radiographs. The method was applied to assess changes in the alveolar bone level at endosseous implants and abutment teeth. Radiographs af 23 endosseous implants and 21 abutment teeth from nine patients were examined and measurements of the alveolar bone level were perfarmed. The mean difference between double observations on the same exposure as well as on repeated exposures was about 0.2 mm (s.d. 0,17–0.32 mm). The uncertainty of the present radiographic method was mainly due to the measurement procedure, as the radiographic technique showed a high degree of reproducibility. The method is a simple and reliable technique for longitudinal investigations of changes in the alveolar bone level at endasseous implant and tooth abutments.
Radiographic lesion of the temporomandibular joint was found in 41 of 100 children with juvenile rheumatoid arthritis using a combination of radiographic techniques. In patients with abnormality, unilateral lesion occurred in 41 per cent. In patients with definite affection, a varying degree of destructions was observed in 93 per cent, restricted translatory movement of the mandibular head in 83 per cent. In many cases dystrophic or dysplasia-like changes occurred, with stump and thick, anteriorly positioned mandibular head and flat fossa. The lesions seemed to be most frequently associated with the polyarticular type, early onset and long duration of the disease.
Non-determinism in a concurrent or distributed setting may lead to many different runs or executions of a program. This paper presents a method to reproduce a specific run for non-deterministic actor or active object systems. The method is based on recording traces of events reflecting local transitions at so-called stable states during execution; i.e., states in which local execution depends on interaction with the environment. The paper formalizes trace recording and replay for a basic active object language, to show that such local traces suffice to obtain global reproducibility of runs; during replay different objects may operate fairly independently of each other and in parallel, yet a program under replay has guaranteed deterministic outcome. We then show that the method extends to the other forms of non-determinism as found in richer active object languages. Following the proposed method, we have implemented a tool to record and replay runs, and to visualize the communication and scheduling decisions of a recorded run, for Real-Time ABS, a formally defined, rich active object language for modeling timed, resource-aware behavior in distributed systems.
Transantral (infraorbital, transmaxillary) examination of the temporomandibular joint was compared with conventional transcranial examination and lateral tomography of patients with rheumatoid arthritis aged 23 to 83. Abnormalities were most frequently found at tomography, and equally frequent at transantral and transcranial examinations. The various examinations appeared to be rather supplementary. Bone erosion was frequently observed at transantral examination, which appeared to be the preferable radiographic method for detecting arthritis of this joint. Combined with transcranial examination, the method is recommended for the evaluation of temporomandibular joint abnormalities in rheumatoid arthritis if tomographic equipment is not available.
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