Fr. 186.00

Forensic Odontology - An Essential Guide

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 1 to 3 weeks (not available at short notice)

Description

Read more

An accessible, essential introduction to forensic odontology.
 
Written by a team of well-established, active practitioners in the field, Forensic Odontology is invaluable for those needing an introduction to the subject for the general dental practitioner who has an interest in forensic dentistry and is contemplating practicing in the field. It will also be useful as a reference during practice.
 

After a brief introduction the book covers dental anatomy and development, expert witness skills, mortuary practice, dental human identification, disaster victim identification, dental age assessment, bite marks, forensic photography and the role of the forensic odontologist in protection of the vulnerable person. Chapters outline accepted and recommended practices and refer to particular methodologies, presenting different schools of thought objectively.

List of contents

List of contributors xiii
 
Acknowledgements xv
 
1 Brief introduction to forensic odontology 1
Romina Carabott
 
1.1 Introduction 1
 
1.2 Forensic odontology in the 21st century 3
 
1.3 Training and experience 4
 
1.4 How to use this book 6
 
1.5 References 6
 
2 Development of the dentition 9
Alastair J. Sloan
 
2.1 Early tooth development 9
 
2.2 Later tooth development 13
 
2.3 Dentinogenesis 14
 
2.4 Tooth root formation 16
 
2.5 Epithelial/mesenchymal interactions in tooth development 17
 
2.6 Amelogenesis 19
 
2.7 Biomineralisation of enamel 20
 
2.8 Further reading 21
 
3 Acting as an expert witness 23
Jason Tucker
 
3.1 Introduction 23
 
3.2 The nature of expert evidence 23
 
3.3 The rules of court 26
 
3.4 The expert's duties 28
 
3.5 Report writing 30
 
3.6 Giving evidence at court 36
 
3.7 Ancillary topics 41
 
3.8 Things to avoid 45
 
3.9 A final thought 47
 
3.10 References 48
 
4 Mortuary practice 49
Alison Anderson
 
4.1 Definitions of a mortuary 49
 
4.2 The Human Tissue Act and the Human Tissue Authority 50
 
4.3 Legal requirements for licence issue 51
 
4.4 Mortuary facilities 52
 
4.5 The Anatomical Pathology Technologist 54
 
4.6 The odontologist in the mortuary: Specialist resection techniques 56
 
4.7 Health and safety in the mortuary 57
 
4.8 References 62
 
5 Dental human identification 65
Romina Carabott
 
5.1 Introduction 65
 
5.2 Comparative dental identification 70
 
5.3 Radiography in dental identification 87
 
5.4 Dental appliances in identification 93
 
5.5 Dental profiling 100
 
5.6 Teeth as a source of DNA 107
 
5.7 Conclusion 110
 
5.8 References 110
 
6 Disaster victim identification 117
Catherine Adams
 
6.1 Introduction 117
 
6.2 Disaster management 118
 
6.3 DVI planning 119
 
6.4 DVI and the dentist 120
 
6.5 The dental DVI team structure 121
 
6.6 Documentation 122
 
6.7 Retrieval of dental records 125
 
6.8 Post-mortem dental examination 127
 
6.9 Ante-mortem dental records 129
 
6.10 Dental reconciliation 130
 
6.11 Equipment for the dental DVI team 132
 
6.12 Maintaining dental team morale 135
 
6.13 References 135
 
7 Dental age assessment 137
Sakher AlQahtani
 
7.1 The importance of knowing age 137
 
7.2 The chronological age 138
 
7.3 The dental age 139
 
7.4 Dentition as an age indicator 140
 
7.5 Age estimation methods in children and young adults 146
 
7.6 Age assessment after tooth development 151
 
7.7 Writing a dental age report 153
 
7.8 Final comments 155
 
7.9 References 155
 
8 Bite marks - I 167
Douglas R. Sheasby
 
8.1 Introduction 167
 
8.2 Bite mark components 167
 
8.3 Nature of the injury 172
 
8.4 Bite mark incidence 174
 
8.5 Principles of bite mark analysis 174
 
8.6 Bite mark evidence recording 184
 
8.7 Bite mark analysis techniques 188
 
8.8 Feature-based analysis conclusions 200
 
8.9 Feature-based analysis report 202
 
8.10 Limitations of bite mark analysis 204
 
8.11 References 207
 
9 Bite marks - II 211
Roland Kouble
 
9.1 Guidelines for bite mark analysis 211
 
9.2 Collection of evidence 211
 
9.3 Assessment o

About the author










Catherine Adams Consultant in Forensic Odontology, UKDVI & Powys Teaching Health Board, UK
Romina Carabott Consultant and Senior Lecturer in Forensic Odontology, Director of expertFORENSICS Ltd, Cardiff, UK
Sam Evans Chief Clinical and Forensic Photographer, School of Dentistry, Cardiff University, UK


Summary

* An accessible, essential introduction to forensic odontology * Written by a team of well-established, active practitioners in the field * Self-contained chapters for ease of use * Objective presentation of different methodologies .

Product details

Authors Catherine Adams, Catherine (University of Manchester) Carabo Adams, Romina Carabott, Carabott Romina, Sam Evans, Evans Sam
Publisher Wiley, John and Sons Ltd
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 31.01.2014
 
EAN 9781119961451
ISBN 978-1-119-96145-1
No. of pages 320
Subjects Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Chemistry

Chemie, Forensik, Zahnmedizin, dentistry, chemistry, Analytische Chemie / Forensik, Forensics, Allg. Zahnmedizin

Customer reviews

No reviews have been written for this item yet. Write the first review and be helpful to other users when they decide on a purchase.

Write a review

Thumbs up or thumbs down? Write your own review.

For messages to CeDe.ch please use the contact form.

The input fields marked * are obligatory

By submitting this form you agree to our data privacy statement.