tooth plate
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Zootaxa ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 5081 (2) ◽  
pp. 295-300
Author(s):  
MEILIAN NIU ◽  
YIXUAN LI ◽  
ZHIYONG DI

Otostigmus (Otostigmus) xizangensis n. sp., a new species of subgenus Otostigmus Porat, 1876 from Xizang, China, is described and illustrated. The new species is diagnosed as follows: antennae 17–19 articles (mainly 19), basal antennal articles cylindrical; forcipular tooth-plate with 4 teeth; tergites (5) 6–20 with complete paramedian sutures; well-developed lateral margination on tergites (6) 9–21; ultimate leg prefemora with four rows of spines, leg 20 with one tarsal spur. The coxopleural process of O. (O.) xizangensis n. sp. exhibits remarkable sexual dimorphism, being long and curved in females, short and straight in males.  


Zootaxa ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 4965 (3) ◽  
pp. 529-540
Author(s):  
VINICIUS C. ESPÍNDOLA ◽  
RODRIGO A. CAIRES ◽  
KENNETH A. TIGHE ◽  
MARIO C. C. DE PINNA ◽  
MARCELO R. S. DE MELO

The family Myrocongridae comprises some of the rarest and least known benthopelagic eel species. It is composed of a single genus, Myroconger Günther, 1870, and five valid species: M. compressus Günther, 1870, from the Atlantic Ocean; M. gracilis Castle, 1991, M. prolixus Castle & Béarez, 1995, and M. nigrodentatus Castle & Béarez, 1995, from the Pacific Ocean; and M. seychellensis Karmovskaya, 2006, from the Indian Ocean. Herein, we report on an additional species from the Atlantic Ocean, Myroconger pietschi n. sp., based on a specimen obtained on the Aracati Bank, North Brazilian ridge, off Ceará State, western South Atlantic. Myroconger pietschi can be diagnosed by having 190 anal-fin rays, a short pectoral fin (16.6% HL), the posterior portion of the ethmovomerine teeth arranged in a single row, teeth on lower and upper pharyngeal tooth plate 24 and 27, and 10 branchiostegal rays. 


Healthcare ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 167
Author(s):  
Güler Burcu Senirkentli ◽  
Fatih Ekinci ◽  
Erkan Bostanci ◽  
Mehmet Serdar Güzel ◽  
Özlem Dağli ◽  
...  

Purpose: In this study, the required dose rates for optimal treatment of tumoral tissues when using proton therapy in the treatment of defective tumours seen in mandibles has been calculated. We aimed to protect the surrounding soft and hard tissues from unnecessary radiation as well as to prevent complications of radiation. Bragg curves of therapeutic energized protons for two different mandible (molar and premolar) plate phantoms were computed and compared with similar calculations in the literature. The results were found to be within acceptable deviation values. Methods: In this study, mandibular tooth plate phantoms were modelled for the molar and premolar areas and then a Monte Carlo simulation was used to calculate the Bragg curve, lateral straggle/range and recoil values of protons remaining in the therapeutic energy ranges. The mass and atomic densities of all the jawbone layers were selected and the effect of layer type and thickness on the Bragg curve, lateral straggle/range and the recoil were investigated. As protons move through different layers of density, lateral straggle and increases in the range were observed. A range of energies was used for the treatment of tumours at different depths in the mandible phantom. Results: Simulations revealed that as the cortical bone thickness increased, Bragg peak position decreased between 0.47–3.3%. An increase in the number of layers results in a decrease in the Bragg peak position. Finally, as the proton energy increased, the amplitude of the second peak and its effect on Bragg peak position decreased. Conclusion: These findings should guide the selection of appropriate energy levels in the treatment of tumour structures without damaging surrounding tissues.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mayumi Iijima ◽  
Mikio Ishiyama

Abstract Tooth plates of the chimaeroids, holocephalian fishes, are unique dental hard tissues. Unlike the teeth of other animals, the tooth plates are located on the roof of the mouth and in the lower jaw. Their tooth plates consist, to a large extent, of lightly mineralized tissue (osteodentin) and hypermineralized tissue (pleromin). Notably, the mineral phase of pleromin is whitlockite, while that of other animals is apatite. Dietary habits of chimaeroids and wearing features of their tooth plates suggest an extreme hardness of pleromin, but this has never been investigated. We examined the microhardness of the tooth plate of Chimaera phantasma and found that pleromin in the biting region was extremely hard, comparable with the hardness of mature tooth enamel, whereas the hardness of immature pleromin was lower than that of bovine dentin. The hardness of osteodentin, on the other hand, was equivalent to that of bovine dentin and almost the same throughout the tooth plate. Immature pleromin was sparsely packed with oval crystals of whitlockite and, as pleromin matures, the space between crystals was filled with small intercrystalline materials. The maturing process of pleromin could partly contribute to its remarkable hardness and have some implications for designing novel biomaterials.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-11
Author(s):  
Honglei Xie ◽  
Li Wan ◽  
Bo Wang ◽  
Haiping Pei ◽  
Weiqing Liu ◽  
...  

Tooth-plate-glass-fiber hybrid sandwich (TFS) is a type of sandwich composites fabricated by vacuum-assisted resin infusion process, in which glass fiber facesheets reinforced by metal plate are connected to foam core through tooth nails. Bending properties and interlaminar properties of TFS beams with various foam densities were investigated by flexural tests and DCB (double cantilever beam) tests. The test results showed that by increasing the foam core density from 35 kg/m3 to 150 kg/m3, the peak strength of TFS beams significantly increased by 168% to 258% compared with similar sandwich beams with fibrous composite facesheets. With the change of foam density and span length, the main failure modes are core shear and facesheet indentation beneath the loading roller. The interlaminar strain energy release rates of TFS specimens also increased by increasing the density of the foam. In addition, an analytical model was used to predict the ultimate bending strength of TFS beams, which were in good accordance with the experimental results.


2020 ◽  
Vol 40 (1) ◽  
pp. e1772274
Author(s):  
Jorge Mondéjar-Fernández ◽  
Thomas J. Challands ◽  
H. Nguyên Huu ◽  
P. Ta Hoa ◽  
Gaël Clément ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Timothy R. SMITHSON ◽  
Thomas J. CHALLANDS ◽  
Ketura Z. SMITHSON

ABSTRACTRamsay Heatley Traquair, the eminent Victorian Scottish palaeoichthyologist and museum curator, procured an extensive collection of Palaeozoic fishes from across Scotland with the help of local miners and quarrymen. One very productive locality near Edinburgh was Loanhead. Traquair described numerous fossil fish from this Serpukhovian site, including four lungfish taxa: Ctenodus interruptus, Sagenodus quinquecostatus, Uronemus splendens and Ctenodus angustulus. The first three are now quite well known, but the fourth was only briefly described and never figured. It is based entirely on tooth plates, which are unusual both in their very small size and the arrangement of the tooth ridges. They lack the diagnostic characters of Ctenodus tooth plates and are here renamed Clackodus angustulus. A further taxon, Conchopoma sp., has recently been identified. Represented by a spade-shaped parasphenoid and denticulated jaw elements, it is the earliest known occurrence of the genus, extending its range into the Mississippian. A sixth taxon may be represented by an isolated parasphenoid bearing an anterior process, previously only seen in Devonian lungfish. The presence of up to six lungfish taxa at a single locality is unprecedented in the Carboniferous and indicates that the high level of lungfish diversity encountered in the Tournaisian of the Scottish Borders continued throughout the Mississippian, adding to the growing evidence that post-Devonian lungfish evolution was not as limited as previously proposed. This may have been due to changes in tooth plate growth, enabling greater variation in dentition and diet. In most Devonian taxa, tooth plate growth can be explained by comparison with that in extant forms, but analysis of Carboniferous tooth plates suggest growth was different in many taxa, possibly based on more than one pioneer tooth, allowing for novel patterns of tooth ridges and different types of teeth to develop on the same plate.


2018 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 261-279 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer Alice Clack ◽  
Thomas James Challands ◽  
Timothy Richard Smithson ◽  
Keturah Zoe Smithson
Keyword(s):  

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