The utilization of small amounts of residual endodontic material for dental identification

Authors

  • John William berketa University of Adelaide
  • Catherine Sims University of Adelaide
  • Rabiah Al Adawiyah Binti Rahmat University of Adelaide

Keywords:

forensic identification, edentulous, extruded endodontic material

Abstract

Dental information is one of the three scientific methods of identifying a deceased person. However, when an investigator is faced with dental ante-mortem information that indicates the deceased has had all his teeth extracted, it may be assumed that the dental information will not be useful, especially if no retained roots are visible in the post-mortem triage. The following case report highlights that careful examination including radiography, may reveal specific detailed information which was useful for identification to be established. Two small radiopaque objects were located in the apical area where the upper left canine root apex would have been. The radiopacities size, location, positioning to both each other and to the left maxillary sinus corresponded to ante-mortem radiographs. This case reveals an unusual use of extruded root canal material being of evidential value even though the tooth was extracted.

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Published

2019-03-16

How to Cite

berketa, J. W., Sims, C., & Binti Rahmat, R. A. A. (2019). The utilization of small amounts of residual endodontic material for dental identification. The Journal of Forensic Odonto-Stomatology - JFOS, 37(1), 63: 65. Retrieved from https://ojs.iofos.eu/index.php/Journal/article/view/1110