Longitudinal analysis of deciduous tooth emergence in Indonesian children. I. Life table methodology

American Journal of Human Biology : the Official Journal of the Human Biology Council
Darryl J Holman, Robert E Jones

Abstract

Deciduous tooth emergence was investigated in a sample of 468 children from central Java. The subjects were examined every 35 days for up to 2 years. Statistics on the timing of emergence for each tooth were derived from actuarial life table estimates, and male and female survivorship curves of tooth emergence were compared for statistical sex differences. Javanese children exhibited delayed emergence compared to other populations. No overall pattern of sexual dimorphism was detected, although upper first molars emerged significantly earlier in females. A comparison of emergence sequence polymorphisms between Javanese, Finnish, and Japanese children revealed that the i1-i2-m1-c-m2 sequence is most common in all three populations, but each shows a uniquely higher proportion of one or more less common polymorphisms.

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Citations

Sep 24, 2004·American Journal of Physical Anthropology·Darryl J Holman, Kyoko Yamaguchi
Oct 16, 2007·American Journal of Physical Anthropology·Morenike FolayanKizito Ndukwe
Jan 1, 1992·American Journal of Human Biology : the Official Journal of the Human Biology Council·Balvinder Kaur, Raghbir Singh
Jan 1, 1994·American Journal of Human Biology : the Official Journal of the Human Biology Council·Balvinder Kaur, Raghbir Singh
Apr 1, 1997·The Journal of Hand Surgery : Journal of the British Society for Surgery of the Hand·S Kwa, M A Tonkin
Apr 30, 2015·American Journal of Physical Anthropology·Kathleen S Paul, Christopher M Stojanowski
Oct 21, 2016·Clinical Oral Investigations·Carolina Un LamYap Seng Chong
Mar 30, 2017·Journal of Investigative and Clinical Dentistry·Pratik KariyaNitesh Tewari
Feb 10, 2021·Forensic Science International : Synergy·Marco CummaudoCristina Cattaneo

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