2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijdsr.2014.05.001
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Prevalence of three rooted deciduous mandibular molars in Indian children

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Cited by 8 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…7 Recent Indian studies performed using intraoral periapical radiographs showed that 5.6–6.5% Indian children had three-rooted deciduous mandibular molars. 8 , 9 In Taiwan, 21–27% of the surveyed patient populations had three-rooted permanent mandibular first molars. 10 , 11 However limited information has been reported in the literature regarding the correlation between the occurrence of three-rooted deciduous mandibular second molars and three-rooted permanent mandibular first molars.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…7 Recent Indian studies performed using intraoral periapical radiographs showed that 5.6–6.5% Indian children had three-rooted deciduous mandibular molars. 8 , 9 In Taiwan, 21–27% of the surveyed patient populations had three-rooted permanent mandibular first molars. 10 , 11 However limited information has been reported in the literature regarding the correlation between the occurrence of three-rooted deciduous mandibular second molars and three-rooted permanent mandibular first molars.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The reason for the difference in the results of the mentioned studies with the present study can be attributed to the exclusion of the first and second primary molars from the target samples in the study of Nagaveni et al [ 25 ] and Tu et al [ 17 ], respectively, as well as racial diversities between Taiwanese [ 17 ], Indian [ 16 , 25 ], Korean [ 26 ], and southeast Iranian population [ 27 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 75%
“…In a similar study conducted by Nagaveni et al, only mandibular second primary molars were examined and the total occurrence of third root among the study participants was 6.5% [ 25 ]. In another study by Srivathsa, the overall prevalence was 5.6%, of which 71.4% was related to the first primary molars and 28.6% was related to the second primary molars [ 16 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…(Ramamurthy and Srinivasan, 2012; Linda Christabel and Gurunathan, 2015)Hence, deciduous teeth often present post carious pulpal implications that require appropriate intervention. (Srivathsa, 2015;Gurunathan and Shanmugaavel, 2016)Rather than premature extraction, a more conservative treatment approach, the retention of primary teeth through restorative or endodontic means has been evolved amongst dental practitioners and pediatric specialists. (Brabant, 1967;Govindaraju and Gurunathan, 2017;Packiri, Gurunathan and Selvarasu, 2017) In paediatric dentistry the most important concerns is the loss of necrotic primary molars leading to space loss.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%