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. 2014 Nov 26;23(9):1176–1185. doi: 10.1038/ejhg.2014.253

Figure 2.

Figure 2

Clinical, intra-oral photographs and OPGs of three patients from family 1 (ac), patient 4 (d), 6 (e), 2 (f), 8 (g), 9 (h) and 3 (i). All patients show macrodontia of upper central incisors. Patient 1D (a) shows macrodontia of central upper incisors and hypodontia of four permanent teeth. Patient 1B (b) shows macrodontia of four upper incisors, as well as talon cusps and dental crowding. Patient 1C (c) shows macrodontia of four upper incisors and hypodontia of four permanent teeth. Patients 4 and 6 (d and e) have no dental abnormalities except for macrodontia of upper central incisors (with a mesiodistal width ≥9.7 mm in both patients). Patient 2 (f) has macrodontia of the central upper incisors and talon cusps. Patient 8 (g) has rather large, mesially inclined central incisors and premature loss of the upper deciduous canines most probably due to crowding. Patient 9 (h) has macrodontia of upper central incisors and enamel defects. Dental anomalies of patient 3 (i) consist of macrodontia of four upper incisors and four lower incisors, as well as hypodontia of four premolars.