Abstract
MICRORADIOGRAPHIC studies of the human dental pulp vessels were prompted by the inadequate anatomical information on the pulpal vascular patterns, and by the statement that these vessels could not be visualized radiographically1. However, it has been shown that fine-contrast media of particle size 0.1–0.5µ (for example, ‘Thorotrast’, ‘Micropaque’) can be introduced by suction injection into the human dental pulp vessels and their vascular patterns demonstrated microradiographically2.
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References
Boling, L. R., Anat. Rec., 82, 25 (1942). Kramer, I. R. H., ibid., 111, 91 (1951).
Saunders, R. L. de C. H., Proceedings of the Cambridge Symposium on X-Ray Microscopy and Microradiography, 1956 (Academic Press, New York).
Cosslett, V. E., and Nixon, W. C., Nature, 168, 24 (1951); Proc. Roy. Soc., B, 140, 422 (1952); J. App. Phys., 24, 616 (1953).
Saunders, R. L. de C. H., Proceedings of the Cambridge Symposium on X-ray Microscopy and Microradiography, 1956 (Academic Press, New York). Redisch, W., Tangco, F. F., and Saunders, R. L. de C. H., “The Peripheral Circulation in Health and Disease” (Grune and Stratton, New York, 1957).
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SAUNDERS, R. X-Ray Microscopy of Human Dental Pulp Vessels. Nature 180, 1353–1354 (1957). https://doi.org/10.1038/1801353b0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/1801353b0
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