A practical treatise on the technics and principles of dental orthopedia and prosthetic correction of cleft palate . ce stated to the author, werein normal occlusion. This case was corrected, as shown in the face on the right,by the surgical removal of the front teeth and alveolar processes, and the insertionof artificial dentures to restore the facial outlines. The face on the left presents theexpression of a degenerate, despite a normal occlusion of the teeth, while that on theright is now characterized by the highest type of intellectuality. We can well 82 PART III. BASIC PRINCIPLES OF PRAC
A practical treatise on the technics and principles of dental orthopedia and prosthetic correction of cleft palate . ce stated to the author, werein normal occlusion. This case was corrected, as shown in the face on the right,by the surgical removal of the front teeth and alveolar processes, and the insertionof artificial dentures to restore the facial outlines. The face on the left presents theexpression of a degenerate, despite a normal occlusion of the teeth, while that on theright is now characterized by the highest type of intellectuality. We can well 82 PART III. BASIC PRINCIPLES OF PRACTICE imagine that the lower jaw of this patient, if dissected at the beginning of the opera-tion, would look Hke Fig. 22, Chapter X, and that the upper denture would besimilarly protruded. In pursuance of this phase of the subject, turn again to the text matter andillustrations of Bimaxillary Protrusions, Division 2, Class I, Chapter XXIX, andthen ask yourself: if the hackneyed and oft-repeated teaching is of any scientificvalue, which avers in various forms that a full complement of teeth is necessary Fiu.
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