Gemination of Primary Canine with Congenitally Missing Primary Central Incisors

JOURNAL TITLE: World Journal of Dentistry

Author
1. Vijay Lakshmi
ISSN
0976-6006
DOI
10.5005/jp-journals-10015-1460
Volume
8
Issue
4
Publishing Year
2017
Pages
3
Author Affiliations
    1. Department of Pedodontics and Preventive Dentistry Mahatma Gandhi Dental College 8 Hospital, Jaipur, Rajasthan India
  • Article keywords

    Abstract

    Aim

    To differentiate between gemination and fusion as both are consequences of the developmental anomalies resulting in the formation of a wide tooth, difficult to differentiate clinically.

    Introduction

    Gemination is often confused with fusion. Fusion occurs when two tooth buds unite, while gemination is said to occur when one tooth bud tries to divide. Various terms, such as double tooth, connation, linking tooth, synodontia, and shizodontia are also used for describing fusion or gemination.

    Case Report

    This article presents the case report of a 6-yearold girl with an asymptomatic wide primary canine present in the right mandibular arch.

    Conclusion

    The tooth was finally diagnosed as gemination, although clinical features suggested fusion, but radiographic evaluation led to gemination.

    Clinical significance

    Gemination ranges from 0.5 to 2.5%. Early and correct diagnosis of such cases helps clinician in the proper treatment planning and avoiding of complications.

    How to cite this article

    Lakshmi V, Marwah N, Goenka P. Gemination of Primary Canine with Congenitally Missing Primary Central Incisors. World J Dent 2017;8(4):331-333.

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