Dental Anatomy and Development Indian Medical PG Practice Questions and MCQs
Practice Indian Medical PG questions for Dental Anatomy and Development. These multiple choice questions (MCQs) cover important concepts and help you prepare for your exams.
Dental Anatomy and Development Indian Medical PG Question 1: A radiograph of a 4-year-old child reveals no evidence of calcification of the mandibular second premolar. This indicates:
- A. The teeth may develop later. (Correct Answer)
- B. Primary second molar extracted to allow mesial drifting of permanent first molar.
- C. The child may never develop premolars.
- D. It is too early to make a final prediction.
Dental Anatomy and Development Explanation: ***The teeth may develop later.***
- While calcification of permanent teeth typically begins at specific ages, there is a **normal variability** in eruption times and developmental stages among children.
- A lack of calcification at age 4 does not definitively rule out future development; the tooth bud for the permanent second premolar may still be present and simply **delayed in its calcification process**.
*Primary second molar extracted to allow mesial drifting of permanent first molar.*
- Extraction of a primary second molar to induce mesial drifting of the permanent first molar is a **clinical procedure** used in orthodontics, not a finding from a radiograph indicating the absence of a premolar.
- The scenario describes a **radiographic finding** on a 4-year-old, not a prior intervention.
*The child may never develop premolars.*
- While **anodontia or hypodontia** (absence of teeth) can occur, a single radiographic finding at age 4 showing no calcification of one tooth is generally **insufficient to confirm permanent absence**.
- Other premolars or later radiographs might be needed to assess the complete developmental status of the dentition.
*It is too early to make a final prediction.*
- While it is generally true that final predictions about tooth development should be made with caution, the option "The teeth may develop later" is a **more specific and positive interpretation** of a delayed calcification, acknowledging the potential for future development over a definitive "too early to tell."
- This option directly addresses the possibility of **delayed tooth formation** which is common and within normal variation.
Dental Anatomy and Development Indian Medical PG Question 2: Ghost teeth are seen in which of the following?
- A. Regional odontodysplasia (Correct Answer)
- B. Dens in dente
- C. Dentin dysplasia
- D. None of the options
Dental Anatomy and Development Explanation: ***Regional odontodysplasia***
- **Ghost teeth** is a characteristic radiographic appearance seen in **regional odontodysplasia** due to severe hypomineralization and thin enamel and dentin.
- This condition involves both the enamel and dentin, resulting in teeth that appear faint and poorly formed on radiographs.
*Dens in dente*
- This condition refers to a tooth anomaly where the **enamel organ invaginates into the dental papilla** before calcification.
- Radiographically, it appears as a **tooth within a tooth**, not as faint or ghost-like structures.
*Dentin dysplasia*
- This is a hereditary developmental disturbance of dentin formation, categorized into two types, Type I and Type II.
- Type I presents with **short or absent roots** and pulp chamber obliteration, while Type II shows **thistle-shaped pulp chambers** and pulp stones, neither of which are described as "ghost teeth."
*None of the options*
- This option is incorrect because **regional odontodysplasia** is indeed associated with the characteristic presentation of "ghost teeth."
Dental Anatomy and Development Indian Medical PG Question 3: Cyst arising from the dental lamina is a characteristic feature of which developmental anomaly?
- A. Radicular cyst
- B. Eruption cyst
- C. Paradental cyst
- D. Lateral periodontal cyst (Correct Answer)
Dental Anatomy and Development Explanation: ***Glandular odontogenic cyst***
- It is specifically associated with the **dental lamina** and arises due to **abnormalities in odontogenesis** [1].
- Characterized by **glandular differentiation** and can cause **bone expansion** in the jaw.
*Radicular cyst*
- Arises as a result of **inflammation** at the apex of a non-vital tooth, not from the dental lamina.
- Commonly associated with **periapical lesions** rather than developmental anomalies.
*Eruption cyst*
- Occurs in association with an **erupting tooth**, typically in the **soft tissue**, not derived from the dental lamina.
- It is a **type of odontogenic cyst** but does not originate from developmental anomalies [1].
*Paradental cyst*
- Typically found adjacent to the **crown of an unerupted tooth** and is linked with the **dental follicle**, rather than the dental lamina.
- Often associated with **inflammation** due to impacted teeth, not a developmental process.
**References:**
[1] Kumar V, Abbas AK, et al.. Robbins and Cotran Pathologic Basis of Disease. 9th ed. Head and Neck, p. 741.
Dental Anatomy and Development Indian Medical PG Question 4: Crown completion of the mandibular canine occurs
- A. At birth
- B. 11-12 years
- C. 8-9 years
- D. 4-5 years (Correct Answer)
Dental Anatomy and Development Explanation: ***4-5 years***
- The permanent mandibular canine crown typically completes its formation between **4 to 5 years of age**.
- This timing is crucial for understanding the **developmental chronology** of permanent dentition.
*At birth*
- At birth, only the crowns of the **deciduous (primary) teeth** are forming or nearing completion, not permanent teeth like the mandibular canine.
- The formation of permanent tooth crowns generally begins later in infancy or early childhood.
*11-12 years*
- By **11-12 years of age**, the crown of the permanent mandibular canine would have been completed for several years, and the tooth is usually in the process of **erupting** or has already erupted into the oral cavity.
- Root completion for the mandibular canine typically occurs around this age (12-14 years), not crown completion.
*8-9 years*
- While other permanent teeth like incisors might be erupting or completing their crowns around **8-9 years of age**, the mandibular canine crown has usually finished forming several years prior.
- This age range typically sees the eruption of the mandibular canines, but not their crown completion.
Dental Anatomy and Development Indian Medical PG Question 5: What is the morphology of the occlusal surface of primary teeth?
- A. Narrower occlusal table than that of permanent. (Correct Answer)
- B. occlusal table equal to the permanent.
- C. Wider occlusal table than that of permanent.
- D. The occlusal table is not narrower than that of permanent teeth.
Dental Anatomy and Development Explanation: ***Narrower occlusal table than that of permanent.***
- Primary teeth, especially molars, have a **significantly narrower occlusal table** buccolingually compared to permanent molars.
- This morphology is adapted for the primary dentition's function and the smaller overall size of primary teeth.
*Wider occlusal table than that of permanent.*
- Primary teeth are generally smaller in all dimensions, and a **wider occlusal table** would be inappropriate for their size and jaw structure.
- The buccolingual dimension of primary posterior teeth is notably constricted at the occlusal surface.
*occlusal table equal to the permanent.*
- The occlusal table of primary teeth is **not equal** to that of permanent teeth; permanent teeth are typically larger and have a broader occlusal surface.
- Equating their occlusal tables would ignore fundamental differences in tooth size and function between dentitions.
*The occlusal table is not narrower than that of permanent teeth.*
- This statement is incorrect as it contradicts the anatomical reality that primary teeth have a **distinctly narrower occlusal table** relative to permanent teeth.
- The relative narrowness is a characteristic feature of primary posterior tooth morphology.
Dental Anatomy and Development Indian Medical PG Question 6: Which premolar would be the most likely to have a single pulp horn?
- A. Mandibular second.
- B. Maxillary first.
- C. Mandibular first. (Correct Answer)
- D. Maxillary second.
Dental Anatomy and Development Explanation: ***Mandibular first***
- The **mandibular first premolar** is quite distinctive due to its small, often non-functional lingual cusp, making it similar in form to a canine.
- This tooth typically has a **single, round root** and a single pulp canal, leading to a single pulp horn.
*Mandibular second*
- The **mandibular second premolar** is more variable, often having two or three cusps and a Y- or H-type groove pattern on its occlusal surface.
- It commonly has **two or three pulp horns** corresponding to its cusps.
*Maxillary first*
- The **maxillary first premolar** typically has two well-defined cusps (buccal and lingual) and often has two roots.
- It usually presents with **two distinct pulp horns**, one for each cusp.
*Maxillary second*
- The **maxillary second premolar** also has two functional cusps and typically has a single root, but its pulp chamber often contains two pulp horns.
- Its cusps are usually more equal in size compared to the maxillary first premolar.
Dental Anatomy and Development Indian Medical PG Question 7: Pell and Gregory classification includes all of the following except:
- A. Angulation of 3rd molar.
- B. Height of mandible.
- C. Relationship to adjacent teeth.
- D. Root size. (Correct Answer)
Dental Anatomy and Development Explanation: ***Root size***
- The Pell and Gregory classification for impacted mandibular third molars assesses the **spatial relationship** between the impacted tooth and surrounding structures
- It specifically evaluates: (1) **Class I-III** based on the relationship to the ramus and second molar, and (2) **Position A-C** based on depth relative to the occlusal plane
- **Root size and morphology** are NOT parameters in this classification system, making this the correct answer
*Angulation of 3rd molar*
- While angulation is important in surgical planning, it is classified by **Winter's classification** (mesioangular, distoangular, vertical, horizontal), not by Pell and Gregory
- However, Pell and Gregory does assess the **position** of the tooth, which is different from its angulation
*Height of mandible*
- The Pell and Gregory classification indirectly relates to mandibular dimensions through its assessment of available **anteroposterior space**
- **Class I:** Sufficient space between distal of 2nd molar and anterior border of ramus
- **Class II:** Space is less than the mesiodistal width of the 3rd molar crown
- **Class III:** 3rd molar is completely within the ramus
*Relationship to adjacent teeth*
- The Pell and Gregory classification specifically includes the **spatial relationship** of the impacted 3rd molar to the 2nd molar and the ascending ramus
- This relationship to adjacent structures is a fundamental component of the classification
Dental Anatomy and Development Indian Medical PG Question 8: Gemination of teeth occurs due to.
- A. Division of a single tooth bud after calcification
- B. Division of a single tooth bud before calcification (Correct Answer)
- C. Fusion of two teeth before calcification
- D. Fusion of two teeth after calcification
Dental Anatomy and Development Explanation: ***Division of a single tooth bud before calcification***
- Gemination (also called "twinning") occurs when a single tooth bud attempts to **divide**, resulting in an unusually wide tooth with two crowns but a single root and root canal. This division must occur early in tooth development, specifically **before full calcification**, to result in a separate crown portion.
- The tooth count in the dentition will be normal when gemination occurs, as one tooth bud effectively forms two crown-like structures.
*Division of a single tooth bud after calcification*
- If the division of a single tooth bud were to occur after calcification, the already formed hard tissue structure would likely fracture rather than form a true geminated tooth.
- Calcification is the process of hardening tissues with calcium salts; by this stage, the tooth's structure is largely set, preventing a "division" in the manner seen in gemination.
*Fusion of two teeth before calcification*
- The fusion of two teeth results in an abnormally large tooth, but it involves the union of two distinct tooth buds, leading to a **reduced total tooth count**.
- While fusion also involves an early developmental stage (before calcification), its origin from two buds differentiates it from gemination which stems from a single bud.
*Fusion of two teeth after calcification*
- Fusion of two teeth after calcification is not possible, as the hard, calcified structures cannot merge in a true biological sense.
- Any post-calcification event involving two teeth would likely be an external union (e.g., concrescence via cementum) rather than a true fusion of the tooth structures themselves.
Dental Anatomy and Development Indian Medical PG Question 9: Facial development takes place during which weeks of gestation?
- A. 8-10 weeks
- B. 18-20 weeks
- C. 12-14 weeks
- D. 4-8 weeks (Correct Answer)
Dental Anatomy and Development Explanation: ***4-8 weeks***
- This period marks the crucial stage for the formation and fusion of **facial prominences**, including the frontonasal, maxillary, and mandibular prominences [1].
- Development of structures like the nose, lips, and palate occurs rapidly during these weeks.
*8-10 weeks*
- By this stage, most major facial structures have already formed and are undergoing refinement.
- Significant **craniofacial anomalies** typically originate from disruptions earlier than 8 weeks [1].
*12-14 weeks*
- This period is well past the primary formation of the face; development during this time involves continued growth and maturation of already established structures.
- Major facial malformations would largely be complete or evident before this stage.
*18-20 weeks*
- At this point, the face is fully formed, and its development involves predominantly growth in size and maturation of tissues.
- Many facial features are identifiable by ultrasound during this timeframe.
Dental Anatomy and Development Indian Medical PG Question 10: The Stack method of dental age estimation is used for which age group?
- A. Infants (Correct Answer)
- B. Adults
- C. Elderly
- D. Adolescents
Dental Anatomy and Development Explanation: The **Stack method** is a technique used for dental age estimation based on the **weight of the mineralized teeth**. It is specifically designed for **infants** (including fetuses and neonates).
1. **Why Infants is correct:** This method relies on the correlation between the dry weight of developing deciduous (milk) teeth and the age of the child. Since tooth mineralization begins in utero and follows a predictable timeline during the first year of life, measuring the weight of these developing tooth germs provides a reliable estimate of age from the 6th month of intrauterine life up to approximately 1 year of age.
2. **Why other options are wrong:**
* **Adults & Elderly:** In these groups, all teeth are fully formed and mineralized. Age estimation relies on regressive changes like **Gustafson’s criteria** [1], [2] (attrition, periodontitis, secondary dentin, cementum apposition, root resorption, and transparency [1]).
* **Adolescents:** Age estimation in this group typically uses **Demirjian’s method** (radiographic stages of tooth development) or the eruption of the third molar. The Stack method is not applicable as the deciduous teeth are already fully formed.
**High-Yield Clinical Pearls for NEET-PG:**
* **Miles Method:** Used for estimating age in adults based on the degree of occlusal wear (attrition).
* **Boyde’s Method:** Uses incremental lines in enamel (cross-striations) for very precise age estimation in children.
* **Gustafson’s Method:** The most common method for adult age estimation (uses 6 parameters) [2]. **Transparency of dentin** is the most reliable parameter among these [1].
* **Schour and Massler Chart:** A visual chart of tooth development and eruption used for children.
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