. Elementary and dental radiography / by Howard Riley Raper . Fig. 176. Fig. 177. Fig. 170. The arrow points to a small pulp stone in the pulp chamber of a lower first 177. Pulp stones throughout the canals in the lower central incisors. Also small stones the lateral incisors. THE USES OF THE RADIOGRAPH IN DENTISTRY 179 Having observed quite a large number of radiographs in the last fewyears, allow me to state that many, altogether too many in our profession,fail to enlarge and fill to their apices all canals which really could, andshould, be so treated. There are, perhaps, some cas


. Elementary and dental radiography / by Howard Riley Raper . Fig. 176. Fig. 177. Fig. 170. The arrow points to a small pulp stone in the pulp chamber of a lower first 177. Pulp stones throughout the canals in the lower central incisors. Also small stones the lateral incisors. THE USES OF THE RADIOGRAPH IN DENTISTRY 179 Having observed quite a large number of radiographs in the last fewyears, allow me to state that many, altogether too many in our profession,fail to enlarge and fill to their apices all canals which really could, andshould, be so treated. There are, perhaps, some cases where the buccalcanals of upper molars and the mesial canals of lower molars simply can-not be enlarged to their apices. But this fact is no excuse for enlargingand filling only the upper third of such canals. The stock excuse forpoor canal work is our patients will not pay a fee sufficiently largeto enable us to give the necessary time to the work. But do thosewho thus excuse themselves really give their patients any choice inthe matter? If one should s


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