Abstract

Aims: The objective of the current research was to determine the prevalence of supernumerary teeth and investigate its characteristic and complications in the Chinese population from the North-East Heilongjiang region. Materials and Methods: It was a descriptive and retrospective study which used registered notes and panoramic radiographs of 12,984 patients who visited the Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery in the 2nd Affiliated Hospital of Jiamusi University, China between June 2011 to November 2015. Patients diagnosed with any syndrome or hereditary diseases were excluded from the study. The features of supernumerary teeth were noted and the data were analyzed using SPSS program, (version 20, Inc., Chicago, USA). The Chi-square test was used to determine the differences in the distribution of supernumerary teeth. It was tested at the 5% level of significance. Results: The prevalence was 5.2% and the most prevalent supernumerary teeth was incisor with 3.39% (n = 441). The supernumerary teeth were seen more in maxilla than mandible. The male to female ratio was 2.9:1. Specifically, higher prevalence of supernumerary teeth in male gender was statistically significant (p = 0.03). The supernumerary teeth mostly occurred in children of 5 - 10 years (62.3%), followed by young adolescent between 11 - 16 years (26.5%). Conclusion: The prevalence of supernumerary teeth was widely seen in children and young adolescent of Chinese population. The occurrence was mostly seen in maxilla than mandible and significantly higher in male than female.

Highlights

  • Supernumerary teeth are a dental anomaly of number characterized by the presence of an additional tooth in the normal series

  • The appearance of supernumerary teeth is higher in the permanent dentition than the primary dentition [3]

  • A significant difference was found between localisation of supernumerary teeth in maxilla and mandible (P = 0.01)

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Summary

Introduction

Supernumerary teeth are a dental anomaly of number characterized by the presence of an additional tooth in the normal series. The aetiology is unknown, yet various theories have been suggested for the presence of supernumerary tooth, such as dichotomy of the tooth bud, hyperactivity of the dental lamina and genetic effect and environmental factors combined [1] [2] These teeth have been found in both primary and permanent dentition. Supernumerary teeth are more frequently seen among males than females with a proportion of 1:8 to 2:6 [4]-[7] It may be found in any region of the dental arch, but the most common site in the midline between the 2 maxillary central incisors, where it is referred as mesiodens. They account for 80% of all supernumerary teeth [3]

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