. The Dental cosmos. Amoedos anatomical articulator, side view. The springs, representing the con-dyle paths, are placed horizontally. Between the bite wax plates is seena large piece of modeling compound which has served to register the con-dyle path. Fig. Same articulator as Fig. 5; front view. Two grooves may be noticed upon thelower plate on the right side, and two upon the left. They have served tofit the modeling compound balls exactly into their places. It can easily be understood that, if thecondyle path presents such differences(ten degrees) in a subject who is in pos-session of a


. The Dental cosmos. Amoedos anatomical articulator, side view. The springs, representing the con-dyle paths, are placed horizontally. Between the bite wax plates is seena large piece of modeling compound which has served to register the con-dyle path. Fig. Same articulator as Fig. 5; front view. Two grooves may be noticed upon thelower plate on the right side, and two upon the left. They have served tofit the modeling compound balls exactly into their places. It can easily be understood that, if thecondyle path presents such differences(ten degrees) in a subject who is in pos-session of all his teeth, the differencewill be far greater in a subject having At the March 1913 session, I presentedto the Society of Stomatology a full setof teeth which I constructed for a ladyhaving a condyle path measuring 15 de-grees on the right side and 50 degrees A MO EDO. OCCLUSION AND THE CONDYLE PATH. 415 on the left—that is, a difference of 35degrees. These measurements showed,in the placing of the teeth, that thereexisted a compensation plane on the leftside and a single straight plane on theright. The dental arches articulatedperfectly in the mouth and in all theirmovements, and, strange to say, I didnot have to correct the cusps in the least. I h


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookiddent, booksubjectdentistry