10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «EBURNIFICATION»
Discover the use of
eburnification in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
eburnification and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
... until finally the bone is left in part uncovered, or the whole surface may be
denuded, the osseous surfaces being brought together and becoming polished
by the movements of the articulation to an ivory-like condition called
eburnification.
J. D. White, John Hugh McQuillen, George Jacob Ziegler, 1894
2
A Dictionary of medical terminology, dental surgery, and the ...
EBUR. Ivory. Ebur Ustum nigrum. Ivory black. EBURNIFICATION. Ebwmaltio;
from Ebur, ivory, and j?e to be made. An incrustation of the articular surfaces of
bones with phosphate of lime, which gives them the hardness and whiteness of
ivory.
Chapin Aaron Harris, 1855
3
The Fundamental Principles of Alveolo-dental Radiology: A ...
The radio- graphic picture therefore, resembles what older writers have
denominated “eburnification,” while some of the recent authors refer to it as “
sclerotic bone,” a term of doubtful pathological significance. If, however, we
compare this area ...
Joseph Andrea Pollia, 1930
One fact illustrative of the variation in susceptibility to caries of the same
individual, and which has undoubtedly been noted by all present, is the frequent
occurrence of so- called arrested decay, eburnification of the carious surface in ...
5
A system of oral surgery
This process of secondary calcification, or eburnification, exhibits fully the
circulatory relations associated with dental caries, for not otherwise than as such
expression is it possible to explain the phenomena : it is, in every particular, a
modified ...
By eburnification I mean calcified masses in which there are visible traces of
dentinal fibers. By ossification I mean a regular osseous structure with lacuna?
and canaliculi in which there are regular protoplasmic bodies sending offshoots
into ...
New York Odontological Society, 1883
One fact illustrative of the variation in susceptibility to caries of the same
individual and which has undoubtedly been noted by all present, is the frequent
occurence of so-called arrested decay and eburnification of the carious surface in
...
Jonathon Taft, George Watt, Nelville Soulé Hoff, 1903
8
A System of oral surgery
This process of secondary calcification, or eburnification, exhibits fully the
circulatory relations associated with dental caries, for not otherwise than as such
expression is it possible to explain the phenomena : it is, in every particular, a
modified ...
James Edmund Garretson, 1884
9
Transactions of New York Odontological Society
It takes on what may be the best and most suitable term, “eburnification,” a term
much commented upon by Dr. Bodecker in his published works. The friction
systematically or otherwise continued does produce a hardening of the enamel ...
New York Odontological Society, 1902
10
Dental Items of Interest
Tra- beculae are not discernible and the cancellations appear to have been
solidified. The radiographic picture therefore, resembles what older writers have
denominated "eburnification," while some of the recent authors refer to it as "
sclerotic ...