Kudos for the effort on putting all this together. Just a few corrections (minor): 2. Difference in space from primary to permanent dentition is 2-4 mm. I think what you meant here was difference in arch length of Max-Mand arches in Primary dentition is 2-5 mm. The permanent arch is 126-128mm and Primary arches - 61.2-68.2 mm (Resource: First Aid NBDE Book and Dental Decks). I'll post in the comments if I see anything else. 3. Mamelons beyond age 10 (This fact should be under permanent dentition and not primary, since primary teeth don't have mamelons) Thanks again for all your efforts..!
I just wanted to say thank you so much for putting this together! Found out recently I passed and these videos helped enormously. Now, I am one step closer to achieving my dream of becoming a dentist! Thank you again!!
i scored 80 in Dental anatomy for NBDE1 test and i believe 60-70% questions were from here or this at least helps u to find the answer too good job keep it up
i don't know if someone already mention this for the primary dentition eruption general rule where he mentions lowers before uppers except laterals at 2:52. I think that is incorrect. In Pinkham "Pediatric Dentistry: Infancy through Adolescent" textbook, the order is MD centrals, MD laterals, MX centrals, MX laters, ...etc. ALSO another thing, in the picture it looks like at 20 months MX canine came in first before MD canines at 28 months in the picture provided, that's also wrong, it should be MD canine first then MX canine follows (both of these teeth erupt between 16-20 months) and then primary MD 2nd molars then MX 2nd molars erupt between 20 to 30 months
where is the fact 26,27,28,30,31,32,33?? i cant find it in this video? and ur chart about eruption sequence of primary dentition -only lower central and lower 2nd molars erupt before upper, rest all upper tooth comes before lower, pls correct it source-First AID, Its a great and very useful video!! :)
these videos are amazing!!!!!! Have you done one with the working/non working contacts???? MY CLASSMATES AND I TAKE BOARDS IN A FEW WEEKS AND EVERYONE FINDS THESE VIDEOS VERYYYYY HELPFUL!!!! THANK YOU!!
Great video series! This is a Godsend for anyone who has their exam coming up! Just two quick things: 1) What happened to facts 27-33? It seems to jump from 26-34. 2) At the _____ mark, I think that the exception of "lowers before uppers" is wrong. The only primary mandibular teeth to "technically" (and I use that term loosely because as we all know, teeth come in when they want!) erupt before the primary maxillary teeth are the mandibular incisors, and mandibular 2nd molar. I think I'm reading this right: www.ada.org/~/media/ADA/Publications/Files/patient_56.ashx Please keep these videos coming; they are fantastic! Thank you again Sir for these gems!
Congratulations for your videos! They are awesomeee! Do you have some material about ligaments/muscles of mastication? that would be great! Thanks a lot you did a GREAT JOB!!!:D
You are just amazingly Fantastic.. I really do not know how to thank you.. !! I have exam next week and these stuff are helping so so so much ! In short I can say you Rock !!! :)
12-13. You said mandibular centrals but I think you meant MAXILLARY centrals. The images of the teeth are correct. The arch is incorrect (should be maxillary no mandibular).
Decks question- the occlusal form of_______ varies from that of any tooth in permanent dentition. Answer given is primary Max 1st molar but according to the video it is primary mand 1 st molar Kindly elaborate Thanks
please upload the other video before monday the 7th because thats when im taking the boards or if ur not ready you can email it to me please i would really use it !! this is my 3rd time and last time taking it please !!
i searched more about it and it seems that i'm not the only one who's confused about it but it says that the highest and sharpest cusp on the deciduous mandibular first molar is the ''''''''ML cusp'''''''''
ML is highest and sharpest. MB is largest in size. So ML = Height. MB = Size. If you look at the primary MD M1 buccal view in @12:30 look at how the MB cusp takes up about 2/3 of the buccal view. However when viewed from the lingual view, the ML cusp will be highest and sharpest. Two very tricky questions, must pay very close attention to what is being asked.
Kudos for the effort on putting all this together. Just a few corrections (minor):
2. Difference in space from primary to permanent dentition is 2-4 mm. I think what you meant here was difference in arch length of Max-Mand arches in Primary dentition is 2-5 mm. The permanent arch is 126-128mm and Primary arches - 61.2-68.2 mm (Resource: First Aid NBDE Book and Dental Decks). I'll post in the comments if I see anything else.
3. Mamelons beyond age 10 (This fact should be under permanent dentition and not primary, since primary teeth don't have mamelons)
Thanks again for all your efforts..!
Thanks for the infos
I just wanted to say thank you so much for putting this together! Found out recently I passed and these videos helped enormously. Now, I am one step closer to achieving my dream of becoming a dentist! Thank you again!!
You say lower before upper except laterals, yet the chart shows the max.canines coming first.
i scored 80 in Dental anatomy for NBDE1 test and i believe 60-70% questions were from here or this at least helps u to find the answer too
good job keep it up
Sevag Melkonian how was the exam? I will Take the exam but I'm scared
i don't know if someone already mention this for the primary dentition eruption general rule where he mentions lowers before uppers except laterals at 2:52. I think that is incorrect. In Pinkham "Pediatric Dentistry: Infancy through Adolescent" textbook, the order is MD centrals, MD laterals, MX centrals, MX laters, ...etc. ALSO another thing, in the picture it looks like at 20 months MX canine came in first before MD canines at 28 months in the picture provided, that's also wrong, it should be MD canine first then MX canine follows (both of these teeth erupt between 16-20 months) and then primary MD 2nd molars then MX 2nd molars erupt between 20 to 30 months
where is the fact 26,27,28,30,31,32,33?? i cant find it in this video? and ur chart about eruption sequence of primary dentition -only lower central and lower 2nd molars erupt before upper, rest all upper tooth comes before lower, pls correct it
source-First AID,
Its a great and very useful video!! :)
Treesa George also mandibular second molar is missing
I do not know who you are and where you are but thank you so much for putting all these tips together, really thank you so much.
these videos are amazing!!!!!! Have you done one with the working/non working contacts???? MY CLASSMATES AND I TAKE BOARDS IN A FEW WEEKS AND EVERYONE FINDS THESE VIDEOS VERYYYYY HELPFUL!!!! THANK YOU!!
Great video series! This is a Godsend for anyone who has their exam coming up!
Just two quick things:
1) What happened to facts 27-33? It seems to jump from 26-34.
2) At the _____ mark, I think that the exception of "lowers before uppers" is wrong. The only primary mandibular teeth to "technically" (and I use that term loosely because as we all know, teeth come in when they want!) erupt before the primary maxillary teeth are the mandibular incisors, and mandibular 2nd molar.
I think I'm reading this right: www.ada.org/~/media/ADA/Publications/Files/patient_56.ashx
Please keep these videos coming; they are fantastic! Thank you again Sir for these gems!
Congratulations for your videos! They are awesomeee! Do you have some material about ligaments/muscles of mastication? that would be great! Thanks a lot you did a GREAT JOB!!!:D
You are just amazingly Fantastic.. I really do not know how to thank you.. !! I have exam next week and these stuff are helping so so so much ! In short I can say you Rock !!! :)
Great material, thank you so much, you made my life easier!
Hi I'm Iraqi and I loved your channel thank you so much
I subscribed your channel 😘
Thank you ! very easy to understand and helpful. Good job
Great video! Amazing. Thank you for sharing your time and knowledge with us.
thank you very much for your great videos, your voice also helps a lot in memorizing all the details.
After point 29 you directly jumped on point 34?
Emm Sh I was thinking the same!
I don't know what to say abt your effort really thank u so much u are awsome
Thank you so much for sharing these videos with everyone... MVP
for real, so helpful. thank you so much for this.
The rule for fact #5, "lowers before uppers except laterals" doesn't really apply to canines either since upper canines appear first, then lowers.
12-13. You said mandibular centrals but I think you meant MAXILLARY centrals. The images of the teeth are correct. The arch is incorrect (should be maxillary no mandibular).
I'm a little confused about the MB cusp cause in the dental decks they say that its the longest one in the lower 1st primary molar
Where is second molar?
Decks question- the occlusal form of_______ varies from that of any tooth in permanent dentition.
Answer given is primary Max 1st molar but according to the video it is primary mand 1 st molar
Kindly elaborate
Thanks
mandibular 1st.
are you going to do any vide about the other subject pathology, anatomy, and biochemistry?
Hi, great videos.. Wanted to know if you have some videos on biochemistry and pathology... Thanks
I do have a number of videos on biochemistry. Go to my channel and click playlists, then click biochemistry.
Do you have the Facts from 26-28 by any chance or it just jumps to 29? Thanks!
Lowers erupt before upper except lateral and canine
Hey are there special videos on general anatomy which are important from exam point of view . Cant find them much.
In 300 facts you are missing enamel hypoplasia localize and generalize I.e Alwz confusing for students and important thanks all there is owsum
Do you have occlusion videos also? These are very helpfu!
yes, go to my channel page and it should be the first video or just search nbde mnemonics occlusion
Is there a compiled list of all of the errors (if there are any) within this series of videos? If so can someone post it please, Thanks
Alexander Yaldoo you just have to read all the comments and do your own studying
bro u are awesome thx
#15 he just says primary central incisor, he doesn't specify maxillary or mandibular... anyone know which it is?
please upload the other video before monday the 7th because thats when im taking the boards or if ur not ready you can email it to me please i would really use it !! this is my 3rd time and last time taking it please !!
k ill try to upload them when i get home tonight
Did you pass the third time???
Are you a dentist now?
i searched more about it and it seems that i'm not the only one who's confused about it but it says that the highest and sharpest cusp on the deciduous mandibular first molar is the ''''''''ML cusp'''''''''
ML is highest and sharpest. MB is largest in size. So ML = Height. MB = Size. If you look at the primary MD M1 buccal view in @12:30 look at how the MB cusp takes up about 2/3 of the buccal view. However when viewed from the lingual view, the ML cusp will be highest and sharpest. Two very tricky questions, must pay very close attention to what is being asked.
This is congruent with information from B&B videos!
canines come before first molars
Nope
BAM! Look'athat thing.
Is there anywhere to get a copy of these powerpoints?
Kyle Baginski i was wondering the same thing. When are you taking your boards?
BOOM! Look at that thing 😂
Hi, it's a great video, but it only presents 39 facts while the title says 300 facts. Did I miss something?
this is part 1, there are around 6 videos. Each video will focus on a different tooth type and the last video will be oral sciences, tmj, etc.
"300"
Except laterals *and canines.
Start at 43 sec for the ones are hurry like me