Index Of Teeth 2007 ❲TRUSTED ⟶❳

Beyond simple tooth numbers, the "index of teeth 2007" in clinical periodontics referred to:

Dental hygienists used these indices to create a score for each tooth surface (mesial, distal, buccal, lingual) and record them in the patient’s permanent chart.


In ICD-10-AM (7th Edition), dental conditions are located in Chapter XI: Diseases of the digestive system, specifically the block K00–K14: Diseases of oral cavity, salivary glands and jaws.

Unidentified remains from disasters prior to 2010 are still being processed. The 2007 index format matches the records of thousands of missing persons. index of teeth 2007

If you find a live or archived index from 2007, you are likely to encounter:

Caution: Many "index of" pages found online are unsecured legacy servers. Downloading files should only be done from trusted, legal sources such as university archives or the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine.


While we cannot provide live, private patient data, a de-identified example of what an index of teeth from 2007 looks like in plaintext is shown below: Beyond simple tooth numbers, the "index of teeth

# Index_of_Teeth_2007_FDI_v2.1.txt
# Created: 2007-06-15
# Source: WHO Oral Health Database
#
# Format: Tooth_Code | Common_Name | Surfaces | Typical_Eruption_Year
11  "Upper right central incisor"  4  7-8
12  "Upper right lateral incisor"  4  8-9
13  "Upper right canine"  4  11-12
...
36  "Lower left first molar"  5  6-7
...
85  "Lower right second primary molar"  5  24-30 months
#
# End of index

This simple index was used to populate dropdown menus in dental EHRs and forensic comparison software.


You might wonder why anyone would search for a 2007 dental index nearly two decades later. There are several reasons:

Dental anthropologists study how tooth numbering and indexing have evolved. The 2007 index represents a key moment when analog charting gave way to digital standardization. Dental hygienists used these indices to create a

Before analyzing the 2007 data, we must define the term "index." In dentistry, an index is not a list of topics; it is a numerical or alphanumerical code used to identify each tooth in the human mouth. A proper index ensures that a dentist in Tokyo, a surgeon in London, and an insurance adjuster in New York are all looking at the same tooth (e.g., the upper right wisdom tooth).

By 2007, three major indexing systems dominated global dentistry:

The "Index of Teeth 2007" refers specifically to how these three systems were cross-referenced in major dental software suites released that year (such as Eaglesoft 2007, Dentrix G4, and Kodak R4 2007).