. Tumours, innocent and malignant; their clinical characters and appropriate treatment. Fig. 292.—Developing ovarian tooth, showing the enamel-organ. Froman adult vroman. cementum is by no means constant. The enamel is lodgedon the crown in lumps or hummocks, with deep ravinesextending to the dentine. The enamel prisms run in alldirections. The pulp is very irregular; some of the teeth,especially those resembling incisors and canines, may lack acentral chamber. In a multicuspidate tooth the pulp-chamber OVARIAN TEETH 555 is of fair size. In some the pulp is converted into secondary-dentine (Fi


. Tumours, innocent and malignant; their clinical characters and appropriate treatment. Fig. 292.—Developing ovarian tooth, showing the enamel-organ. Froman adult vroman. cementum is by no means constant. The enamel is lodgedon the crown in lumps or hummocks, with deep ravinesextending to the dentine. The enamel prisms run in alldirections. The pulp is very irregular; some of the teeth,especially those resembling incisors and canines, may lack acentral chamber. In a multicuspidate tooth the pulp-chamber OVARIAN TEETH 555 is of fair size. In some the pulp is converted into secondary-dentine (Fig. 293); in others it is full of fat-globules. Thepresence of nerves in the pulps of ovarian teeth was assertedby Salter, and tissue resembling nerve-fibrils may be detectedin pulp suitably prepared. Ovarian teeth develop on thesame principle as normal teeth (Figs. 292, 294).. Fig. 293.—Microscopic characters ofa multicuspidate and bicuspidateovarian tooth.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectneoplasms, bookyear19