Tooth gemination explained

Tooth gemination
Field:Dentistry

Tooth gemination is a dental phenomenon that appears to be two teeth developed from one. There is one main crown with a cleft in it that, within the incisal third of the crown, looks like two teeth, though it is not two teeth. The number of the teeth in the arch will be normal.

Signs and symptoms

Cause

The cause of gemination is still unknown.[1] However, there are a few possible factors contributing to gemination:

Mechanism

The phenomenon of gemination arises when two teeth develop from one tooth bud, resulting in an extra tooth for the patient. In contrast, fusion occurs when two normally separated tooth germs unite, making it appear as if the patient is missing a tooth. Fused teeth can form through the union of two normally separated tooth germs, which can be either complete or incomplete, depending on the stage of development at the time of union. Occasionally, two independent pulp chambers and root canals can be observed. However, fusion can also occur between a normal tooth bud and a supernumerary tooth germ. In these cases, the number of teeth remains normal, making differentiation from gemination very difficult, if not impossible. In geminated teeth, division is usually incomplete, resulting in a large tooth crown with a single root and a single canal. It is an asymptomatic condition

The prevalence of gemination or fusion is 2.5% in primary dentition,[3] and 0.1–0.2% in permanent dentition.[4] It is more frequently observed in primary than permanent dentition; anterior than posterior teeth;[5] unilaterally than bilaterally.[3] It commonly occurs in the primary upper incisors.

Diagnosis

Treatment

Before root canal treatment or extraction are carried out, the clinician should have thorough knowledge about the root canal morphology to avoid complications.

Related abnormalities of the dentition

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Tooth gemination in dentistry. DentaGama Dental Social Network. DentaGama. 1 December 2017.
  2. Nandini DB, Deepak BS, Selvamani M, Puneeth HK . Diagnostic dilemma of a double tooth: a rare case report and review . Journal of Clinical and Diagnostic Research . 8 . 1 . 271–2 . 2014 . 24596793 . 3939503 . 10.7860/JCDR/2014/6556.3928.
  3. Süha Türkaslan, Hasan Suat Gökçe and Mehmet Dalkız. Esthetic Rehabilitation of Bilateral Geminated Teeth: A Case Report. European Journal of Dentistry. July 2017. 1. 3. 188–191. 2638247. 19212565.
  4. E. Grammatopoulos. Gemination or fusion?. British Dental Journal. 11 Aug 2007. 203. 3. 119–120. 10.1038/bdj.2007.699. 17694005. free.
  5. ((Siavash Moushekhian)), ((Masoud Shiehzade)), ((Amir Shammas)). Treatment Plan and Clinical Management of a Geminated Maxillary Lateral Incisor: A Case Report. Journal of Dental Materials and Techniques . June 2014. 3. 2. 87–90.
  6. Spuller RL, Harrington M . Gemination of a maxillary permanent central incisor treated by autogenous transplantation of a supernumerary incisor: case report . The American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry. 8 . 4 . 299–302 . 1986 . 3472179.