General and dental pathology with special reference to etiology and pathologic anatomy; a treatise for students and practitioners . Fig. 348.—Dentigerous or root cyst as- Fig. 349.—Dentigerous or root cysts ted in its etioiogy with a chronic associated in etiology with a chronic dento- dentoalveolar abscess in an upper second alveolar abscess in an upper first shown to he the remnants of the enamel organ—the epithelialcells of which have become entangled in the peridental tissueswherein they remain quiescent until a certain degree of irrita-tion leads To their proliferation.


General and dental pathology with special reference to etiology and pathologic anatomy; a treatise for students and practitioners . Fig. 348.—Dentigerous or root cyst as- Fig. 349.—Dentigerous or root cysts ted in its etioiogy with a chronic associated in etiology with a chronic dento- dentoalveolar abscess in an upper second alveolar abscess in an upper first shown to he the remnants of the enamel organ—the epithelialcells of which have become entangled in the peridental tissueswherein they remain quiescent until a certain degree of irrita-tion leads To their proliferation. Black admitted at no time thatthese epithelial elements were remnants of the enamel organ, Pacific Dental Gazette, xxv, p. 781. CHRONIC DENTOALVEOLAR ABSCESS 443 stating that he had followed the breaking up of the cells of theenamel organ. 1 have seen them float away, he says, withthe tissues in groups, forming epithelial pearls, some large and some very small. I have followed them from one age of an ani-mal to another ago, and as I have thus followed them, I havefound that they were absorbed and disappeared completely


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectpathology, bookyear19