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MUCLecture 2023 21726775

This document provides details on the anatomy of the maxillary canine tooth, including its importance, features, and differences from other teeth. The maxillary canine has the longest root in the dental arch and helps support facial muscles and other teeth. It erupts later than other teeth, around ages 12-13. Key anatomical features include a prominent pointed cusp, convex labial and lingual surfaces, and a triangular, conical root that is sometimes curved. The maxillary canine differs from incisors in having a single cusp, longer root, and more prominent cingulum and convexities.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
138 views6 pages

MUCLecture 2023 21726775

This document provides details on the anatomy of the maxillary canine tooth, including its importance, features, and differences from other teeth. The maxillary canine has the longest root in the dental arch and helps support facial muscles and other teeth. It erupts later than other teeth, around ages 12-13. Key anatomical features include a prominent pointed cusp, convex labial and lingual surfaces, and a triangular, conical root that is sometimes curved. The maxillary canine differs from incisors in having a single cusp, longer root, and more prominent cingulum and convexities.
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Lecture 7 Dental Anatomy Dr.

Shatha Abdul Wahid

Maxillary canine
It is located at the corner of the mouth and they have the longest root in
the dental arch.

Importance of canine:
1. It gives support to the facial muscles and helps in maintaining.
2. Their stability in the alveolar process of the jaw makes it very
important as an assistant in stabilizing, it is the most prominent
tooth in the mouth.
In function, it gives support to the incisor and premolar. It erupts at 12-
13 years.

Labial aspect:
1. The crown is narrower mesio –distally than the central incisor
2. The cervical line is convex toward the root.
3. The contact area mesially at the junction of the middle and incisal
third.
4. It is convex from mesial and distal sides with slight convexity at the
area between cervical line and distal contact point.
5. The tip of the cusp is on the alien with the center of the root.
This cusp has two slopes mesial slop shorter than the distal slop.
6. The labial aspect is smooth with depression mesially and distally,
dividing the aspect into the three lobs the middle lob is much
greater developed than the other, which produces a labial ridge.
The root is conical with a blunt apex, sometimes it is curved messily or
distally.
Lingual aspect:
1. Crown and root tapered lingually
2. The cervical line is more curved than labially
3. Well-developed cingulum.
4. There is a lingual ridge extending below the cingulum.
5. There are two fossae mesial and distal fossa between the two
marginal ridge
6. There is a mesial and distal developmental depression on the most
of root length.
Mesial aspect
1. The labial and lingual outlines are more convex and this convexity
is located within the curvature of the cervical line.
2. From the labial aspect, it has slight convexity at the cervical third
to the tip of the cusp.
3. From the lingual aspect represent the convexity at the cervical third
(cingulum) then be small concavity at the middle third then be
straight at the incisal third.
4. The cervical line curved to word the cusp.
5. The root is blunt and conical in shape.
6. Mesial aspect have convexity at all point except for small area
above the contact point is flat.
Distal aspect:
Similar to the mesial aspect with some differences:
1. The cervical line is less curved.
2. Distal marginal ridges are more irregular than the mesial
marginal ridge.
3. Deeper concavity above the contact point.
4. Deeper developmental depression on distal root.

Incisal aspect
1. The labio- lingual dimension is greater than mesio- distal
dimension.
2. The tip of the cusp is labial to the center of the crown (labio-
lingually )and mesial to the center (mesio- distally).
3. The ridge of the middle lob is very prominent.
4. Cingulum is more prominent lingually.
Differences between maxillary incisor and canine:
1. Canine has single pointed cusp; the central incisor doesn't have a
cusp.
2. Canine has distal slop of cusp longer than mesial slop.
3. Canine has convexity at the labial and bulk cingulum at the palatal
surface than the central incisor
4. Canine has a longer root with a triangular cross-section.
5. Canine has well-developed grooves at the mesial and distal side of
the root.
6. Canine crown narrower mesio- distally and wider labio-lingually
than central incisor.
7. Canine has narrower root at lingual surface than central incisor.

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