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  2. La Chapelle-aux-Saints 1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Chapelle-aux-Saints_1

    This specimen had lost many of his teeth, with evidence of healing. All of the mandibular molars were absent and consequently, some researchers suggested that the 'Old Man' would have needed someone to process his food for him. This was widely cited as an example of Neanderthal altruism, similar to Shanidar 1. Later studies have shown that La ...

  3. Hypodontia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypodontia

    In the white European population they suggested a prevalence of 4.6% in males and 6.3% in females. In an African-American sample they found this to be 3.2% in males and 4.6% in females. The same study found that in the permanent dentition the most likely teeth to be missing and the frequency of these missing teeth was: Mandibular second premolar 3%

  4. Toothlessness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toothlessness

    Dentures: False teeth are mounted onto an acrylic base. These may be partial (to replace some missing teeth) or complete (where all the natural teeth are missing). [8] Dentures may be removable, or fixed in the mouth by dental implants. Advantages: This is the least expensive option for the replacement of teeth.

  5. Colorado dentist rips Humana after elderly man's routine ...

    www.aol.com/colorado-dentist-rips-humana-elderly...

    When an 83-year-old patient came to him in December for a cleaning, Ross and his staff realized the man was struggling to clean his teeth properly.

  6. MTA worker’s teeth knocked out by subway vagrant ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/mta-worker-teeth-knocked-subway...

    A 44-year-old Big Apple transit worker who had two of his teeth knocked out by a short-on-cash subway vagrant said Sunday that he’s now afraid to return to work. The victim, whose name is being ...

  7. History of dental treatments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_dental_treatments

    There is archeological evidence that humans have attempted to replace missing teeth with root form implants for thousands of years. Remains from ancient China (dating 4000 years ago) have carved bamboo pegs, tapped into the bone, to replace lost teeth, and 2000-year-old remains from ancient Egypt have similarly shaped pegs made of precious metals.

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