Artigo Revisado por pares

Prenatal growth of the human mandibular condylar cartilage

1995; Elsevier BV; Volume: 108; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/s0889-5406(95)70083-8

ISSN

1097-6752

Autores

Rosario Berraquero, José Palacios, Carlos Gamallo, Pilar de la Rosa, José Ignacio Rodrı́guez,

Tópico(s)

dental development and anomalies

Resumo

The question of whether the condylar cartilage possesses a growth potential like that of the long bone growth plates has been the subject of contrasting viewpoints. We have recently established that the thickness of the human tibial growth plate progressively decreases during the second half of the fetal period, but that the changes in the total human condylar thickness do not correlate with fetal age or weight. The present study examined the change in the thickness of the human mandibular condyle layers during the fetal growth of the mandible. Mandibles were obtained from autopsy of 19 human fetuses ranging in fetal age from 18 to 41 weeks. The total length of the mandible, the lengths of the mandibular body and of the ramus were measured, as well as the gonial angles. The total thickness of the condyle, and the thickness of the articular, progenitor, cartilage, chondroblast, and hypertrophic chondrocyte layers were measured on the central segment of central sagittal sections of the mandibular condylar cartilage. The total mandible, the corpus and the ramus lengths increased linearly with the age of the fetus and they all correlated strongly with fetal weight. However, changes in the total condylar thickness and in the thickness of the cartilage layer (chondroblast plus hypertrophic chondrocytes) did not correlate with fetal weight or mandibular length. The thickness of the articular layer increased with weight, but changes in the progenitor layer were independent of corporal and mandibular growth.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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