CONDENSED DENTAL GLOSSARY
We have listed a condensed dental glossary for
you to become familiar with terms associated with dentistry.
ABSCESS - Acute
or chronic, localized inflammation, with a collection of pus, associated
with tissue destruction and swelling.
ABUTMENT - A tooth or implant
used to support a prosthesis.
ALVEOLAR - This is referring
to the bone to which a tooth is attached.
AMALGAM - Alloy used in direct
dental restorations.
ANALGESIA - Loss of pain sensations
without loss of consciousness.
ANESTHESIA - Partial or total
absence of sensation to stimuli.
ANTERIOR - In reference to the
teeth and tissues located towards the front of the mouth - maxillary
and mandibular incisors and canines.
APEX - The tip or end of the
root end of the tooth.
ANTERIOR - Refering to the teeth
and tissues located towards the front of the mouth - maxillary and
mandibular incisors and canines.
APEX - The tip or end of the
root end of the tooth.
BENIGN - The mild character of
an illness or the non-malignant character of a neoplasm.
BICUSPID - A premolar tooth;
a tooth with two cusps.
BILATERAL - Pertaining to, or
occurring on, both sides.
BIOPSY - The process of removing
tissue for histologic evaluation.
BITEWING RADIOGRAPH – An
interproximal view radiograph of the coronal portion of the tooth.
BONDING - This is the process
by which two or more components are made integral by mechanical
and/or chemical adhesion at their interface.
BRIDGE - A fixed partial denture
which is a prosthetic replacement of one or more missing teeth cemented
or attached to the abutment teeth or implant abutments adjacent
to the space; removable partial denture (removable bridge) is a
prosthetic replacement of one or more missing teeth on a framework
that can be removed by the patient.
BRUXISM - Basically the parafunctional
grinding of the teeth.
CALCULUS - A hard deposit of
mineralized plaque, which is attached to crowns and/or roots of
teeth.
CANAL - A relatively narrow tubular
passage or channel; space inside the root portion of a tooth containing
pulp tissue; the passage which transmits vessels and nerves through
the jaw to branches that distributes them to the teeth.
CANTILEVER EXTENSION –
This is part of a fixed prosthesis that is supported at one end
only.
CARIES - Common term used for
tooth decay.
CAVITY - Decay in tooth caused
by caries; also referred to as carious lesion.
CEMENTUM – The hard connective
tissue covering the tooth root.
CLEFT PALATE – A congenital
deformity resulting in lack of fusion of the soft and/or hard palate,
either partial or complete.
COMPOSITE - A dental restorative
material made up of disparate or separate parts.
CORONAL – Referring to
the crown of a tooth.
CROWN
Anatomical crown - Portion of tooth normally covered
by, and including, enamel.
Abutment crown – An artificial crown serving
for the retention or support of a dental prosthesis.
Artificial crown – The restoration covering
or replacing the major part, or the entire clinical crown of a tooth.
Clinical crown - Portion of a tooth not covered
by supporting tissues.
CROWN LENGTHENING - A surgical
procedure exposing more tooth for restorative purposes by apically
positioning the gingival margin and/or removing supporting bone.
CURETTAGE - The scraping or cleaning
the walls of a cavity or gingival pocket.
CUSP - A pointed or rounded eminence
on or near the masticating surface of a tooth.
CYST – A pathological cavity
containing fluid or soft matter.
DECAY - Term for carious lesions
in a tooth; decomposition of tooth structure.
DENTAL PROPHYLAXIS – The
scaling and polishing procedure performed to remove coronal plaque,
calculus, and stains.
DENTIN - Part of the tooth that
is beneath enamel and cementum.
DENTITION - The teeth in the
dental arch.
DENTURE - An artificial substitute
for natural teeth and adjacent tissues.
DENTURE BASE - Part of a denture
that makes contact with soft tissue and retains the artificial teeth.
DIASTEMA - A space, such as one
between two adjacent teeth in the same dental arch.
DISPLACED TOOTH - a partial evulsion
of a tooth
DISTAL – Pertaining toward
the back of the dental arch
DRY SOCKET – A localized
inflammation of the tooth socket following extraction due to infection
or loss of blood clot.
EDENTULOUS – Meaning without
teeth.
ENAMEL – The hard calcified
tissue covering dentin of the crown of tooth.
ENDODONTIST – A dental
specialist who limits practice to treating disease and injuries
of the pulp and associated perpendicular conditions.
EQUILIBRATION - The reshaping
of the occlusal surfaces of teeth to create harmonious contact relationships
between the upper and lower teeth.
EVULSION – A complete separation
of the tooth from its socket due to trauma.
EXCISION – The surgical
removal of bone or tissue.
EXOSTOSIS – An overgrowth
of bone.
EXTRACORONAL – The outside
the crown of a tooth.
EXTRAORAL – Pertaining
to outside the oral cavity.
FACIAL - Surface of a tooth directed
toward the face and opposite the lingual surface.
FILLING - Term used for the restoring
of lost tooth structure by using materials such as metal, alloy,
plastic, or cement.
FORAMEN – A natural opening
into or through bone.
FURCATION - The anatomic area
of a multirooted tooth where the roots diverge.
GINGIVA – The soft tissues
overlying the crowns of unerupted teeth and encircling the necks
of those that have erupted.
GINGIVITIS – The inflammation
of gingival tissue without loss of connective tissue.
GINGIVOPLASTY – A surgical
procedure to reshape gingiva to create a normal, functional form.
HEMISECTION – The surgical
separation of a multirooted tooth so that one root and/or the overlaying
portion of the crown can be surgically removed.
IMPACTED TOOTH - An unerupted
or partially erupted tooth that is positioned against another tooth,
bone, or soft tissue so that complete eruption is unlikely.
IMPLANT - material inserted or
grafted into tissue; dental implant - device specially designed
to be placed surgically within or on the mandibular or maxillary
bone as a means of providing for dental replacement.
INLAY - An intracoronal restoration.
INTERPROXIMAL – The area
between the adjoining surfaces of adjacent teeth.
INTRACORONAL – This is
referring to 'within' the crown of a tooth.
INTRAORAL - Inside of the mouth.
KERATIN - a protein present in
all cuticular structures of the body, such as hair, epidermis, horns,
and the organic matrix of the enamel of the teeth.
LABIAL - Pertaining to or around
the lip.
LESION - An injury or wound;
area of diseased tissue.
LINGUAL - Pertaining to or around
the tongue.
MALAR - Pertaining to the cheekbone.
MALIGNANT – To have the
properties of dysplasia, invasion, and metastasis.
MALOCCLUSION – The improper
alignment of biting or chewing surfaces of upper and lower teeth.
MANDIBLE – The lower jaw.
MARYLAND BRIDGE – The trade
name that has become synonymous with any resin bonded fixed partial
denture (bridge).
MAXILLA - The upper jaw.
MESIAL - Toward the midline of
the dental arch.
MOLAR - Teeth posterior to the
premolars on either side of the jaw; grinding teeth, having large
crowns and broad chewing surfaces.
MUCOUS MEMBRANE – The lining
of the oral cavity as well as other canals and cavities of the body.
OBTURATOR - A disc or plate,
which closes an opening.
OCCLUSION – The contact
between biting or chewing surfaces of maxillary and mandibular teeth.
ONLAY - The restoration made
outside the oral cavity that replaces a cusp or cusps of the tooth,
which is then luted to the tooth.
OPERCULUM - Flap of tissue over
an unerupted or partially erupted tooth.
ORAL - Pertaining to the mouth.
ORAL AND MAXILLOFACIAL SURGEON
- Dental specialist whose practice is limited to the diagnosis,
surgical and adjunctive treatment of diseases, injuries, deformities,
defects and esthetic aspects of the oral and maxillofacial regions.
ORAL PATHOLOGY - Specialty of
dentistry and pathology concerned with recognition, diagnosis, investigation
and management of diseases of the oral cavity, jaws, and adjacent
structures.
ORTHODONTIST - Dental specialist
whose practice is limited to the interception and treatment of malocclusion
of the teeth and their surrounding structures.
ORTHOGNATHIC – The functional
relationship of maxilla and mandible.
OSTEOPLASTY – A surgical
procedure that modifies the configuration of bone.
OSTEOTOMY – The surgical
cutting of bone.
OVERDENTURE – A prosthetic
device that is supported by retained teeth roots or implants.
PALATE - The hard and soft tissues
forming the roof of the mouth that separates the oral and nasal
cavities.
PALLIATIVE – An action
that relieves pain but is not curative.
PARTIAL DENTURE - Refers to the
prosthetic device that replaces the missing teeth on a framework
that can be removed by the patient.
PEDIATRIC DENTIST - Dental specialist
whose practice is limited to treatment of children from birth through
adolescence.
PERIAPICAL - Area surrounding
the end of the tooth root.
PERICORONAL – Area around
the crown of a tooth.
PERIODONTAL - Pertaining to the
supporting and surrounding tissues of the teeth.
PERIODONTAL DISEASE – The
inflammatory process of the gingival tissues and/or periodontal
membrane of the teeth.
PERIODONTIST - Dental specialist
whose practice is limited to the treatment of diseases of the supporting
and surrounding tissues of the teeth.
PERIODONTITIS – The inflammation
and loss of the connective tissue of the supporting or surrounding
structure of teeth with loss of attachment.
PERIRADICULAR – To surround
a portion of the root of the tooth.
PLAQUE - Substance that accumulates
on teeth composed largely of bacteria and bacterial derivatives.
PONTIC - The term used for the
artificial tooth on a fixed partial denture.
POSTERIOR – Referring to
teeth and tissues towards the back of the mouth.
PRIMARY DENTITION - First set
of teeth.
PROPHYLAXIS – The scaling
and polishing procedure performed to remove coronal plaque, calculus
and stains.
PROSTHESIS – An artificial
replacement of any part of the body;
PROSTHODONTIST - Dental specialist
whose practice is limited to the restoration of the natural teeth
and/or the replacement of missing teeth with artificial substitutes.
PULP - Blood vessels and nerve
tissue that occupies the pulp cavity of a tooth.
PULP CAVITY - The space within
a tooth which contains the pulp.
PULPECTOMY – The complete
removal of pulp tissue from the root canal space.
PULPITIS – The inflammation
of the dental pulp.
QUADRANT - One of the four equal
sections into which the dental arches can be divided.
RADICULAR - Pertaining to the
root.
RADIOGRAPH - X-ray.
ROOT CANAL - The portion of the
pulp cavity inside the root of a tooth.
ROOT CANAL THERAPY - Treatment
of disease and injuries of the pulp and associated periradicular
conditions.
SCALING – The removal of
plaque, calculus, and stain from teeth.
SEXTANT - One of the six relatively
equal sections into which a dental arch can be divided.
SPLINT - A device used to support,
protect, or immobilize oral structures that have been loosened,
replanted, fractured or traumatized
STOMATITIS – The inflammation
of the membranes of the mouth.
TEMPOROMANDIBULAR JOINT (TMJ)
- Connecting hinge mechanism between the mandible and base of the
skull.
TEMPOROMANDIBULAR JOINT DISFUNCTION
– The abnormal functioning of temporomandibular joint.
TRISMUS – The restricted
ability to open the mouth.
UNERUPTED - Tooth/teeth that
have not penetrated into the oral cavity.
UNILATERAL - Pertaining to or
affecting one side.
VENEER - Construction of crowns
or pontics, a layer of tooth-colored material attached to the surface
by direct fusion, cementation, or mechanical retention; also refers
to a restoration that is luted to the tooth.
VESTIBULOPLASTY – One or
all of a series of surgical procedures designed to increase relative
alveolar ridge height.
XEROSTOMIA - The decrease in
salivary secretion that produces dryness of the oral mucosa and/or
cervical caries.
YEAST - Term for a fungus.
ZYGOMATIC BONE – The quadrangular
bone on either side of face that forms the cheek prominence.