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  2. Horse teeth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse_teeth

    Many veterinarians will use a Triadan chart to record the horse's dental problems for future reference. To help prevent dental problems, it is recommended to get a horse's teeth checked by a vet or equine dental technician every 6 months. However, regular checks may be needed more often for individuals, especially if the horse is very young or ...

  3. Modified triadan system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modified_triadan_system

    Modified triadan system of dental nomenclature in the horse. The modified triadan system is a scheme of dental nomenclature that can be used widely across different animal species. It is used worldwide among veterinary surgeons. Each tooth is given a three digit number. The first number relates to the quadrant of the mouth in which the tooth lies:

  4. Tooth eruption - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tooth_eruption

    The first, known as primary dentition stage, occurs when only primary teeth are visible. Once the first permanent tooth erupts into the mouth, the teeth that are visible are in the mixed (or transitional) dentition stage. After the last primary tooth is shed or exfoliates out of the mouth, the teeth are in the permanent dentition stage.

  5. Equine dentistry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equine_dentistry

    Equine dentistry was practiced as long ago as 600 BCE in China, and has long been important as a method of assessing the age of a horse. [1] This was also practiced in ancient Greece, with many scholars making notes about equine dentistry, including Aristotle with an account of periodontal disease in horses in his History of Animals, and in Rome with Vegetius writing about equine dentistry in ...

  6. Mammal tooth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mammal_tooth

    Therefore, wolf teeth are commonly removed. [10] Horse teeth can be used to estimate the animal's age. Between birth and five years, age can be closely estimated by observing the eruption pattern on milk teeth and then permanent teeth. By age five, all permanent teeth have usually erupted. The horse is then said to have a "full" mouth.

  7. Permanent teeth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permanent_teeth

    The first of the permanent teeth to erupt are the permanent first molars, right behind the last 'milk' molars of the primary dentition. These first permanent molars are important for the correct development of a permanent dentition. Up to thirteen years of age, 28 of the 32 permanent teeth will appear.

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  9. Infundibulum (tooth) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infundibulum_(tooth)

    The cheek teeth of elephants express this in a slightly different form with the vertical curtains of enamel coming in from the sides and meeting in the middle. [ 3 ] In horses and most equines the cross section of the tooth at the grinding (occlusal) surface shows the roughly circular or ovoid infundibulum as the incisor begins to wear. [ 4 ]