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Wheeler's Dental Anatomy, Physiology and Occlusion
By Stanley J. Nelson DDS MS
Average Rating: 3 star rating (5 Reviews)

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Publisher: Saunders
Edition: 9
Date: June 1, 2009
Binding: Hardcover
Pages: 368
     
     
     
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Product Description:  
 
Now in full color, this essential text features a visually oriented presentation of dental anatomy, physiology, and occlusion - the foundation for all of the dental sciences. Coverage includes discussions of clinical considerations, dentitions, pulp formation, and the sequence of eruptions. In addition to detailed content on dental macromorphology and evidence-based chronologies of the human dentitions, this edition also includes flash cards, an updated Companion CD-ROM, and Evolve resources that make this text a comprehensive resource for dental anatomy.

  • Understand the standards of tooth formation and apply them to clinical presentations with the Development and Eruption of the Teeth chapter.
  • Focus on the functions and esthetics of disorders you'll encounter in daily practice with content on TMJ and muscle disorders.
  • Get a concise review of dentition development from in-utero to adolescence to adulthood with the appendix of tooth morphology.


  • All line drawings and essential photos have been replaced with full-color pieces.
  • Sharpen your knowledge with interactive learning tools and expanded content on the Companion CD-ROM including study questions, 360-degree rotational tooth viewing, and animations.
  • Test your knowledge on labeling, tooth numbering, and tooth type traits and prepare for Board exams with flash cards.
  • Find even more study opportunities on the Evolve website with a PowerPoint presentation, flash cards, a test bank, and labeling exercises.
 
 
Customers' Reviews:  
1 out of 5 stars.  Worst!, May 13, 2009
I ordered the product last 12 Apr 09, it is now May 13 09 and I have not received the products yet. Now tell me, isn't it worst to wait for something that you already paid for and not even see the product or heard from the merchant?

0 of 1 people found the above review helpful.
 
 
1 out of 5 stars.  The cheaper edicion is horrible, July 7, 2005
I bought theWheeler's Dental Anatomy, Physiology and Occlusion thinking that I was buying a pretty new edicion of a book with a CD and color pictures. What I recieved at home was an old book with horrible black and white pictures and an awful redaction. I don't know how newest edition is, but I am shure that this old one is almost not a text book.

1 of 5 people found the above review helpful.
 
 
5 out of 5 stars.  What a Dental Anatomy Book Should Not Be Without , June 14, 2005
Unfortunately some of the reviewers are steeped in subjective reality and probably the users and promoters of another dental anatomy text. In a period of evidence based dental education and practice, a book without much of a refernce base is outdated; a book with out a CD is outdated; a book without a good index is hardly useful; a book without the latest information on dental anatomy is outdated; and a book without facts to build on is no book at all.
Wheeler's 8th edition has none of these deficiences.


2 of 5 people found the above review helpful.
 
 
1 out of 5 stars.  Wheeler is no Netter!, January 28, 2005
This book is wordy and lacks organization. It is full of awkward sentences, rambling paragraphs and has no sense of continuity. The diagrams are not labeled, of low quality and seemingly outdated. There are much better anatomy references out there and I suggest looking into the other literature. Wheeler's text simply demonstrates the need for a Frank Netter of sorts- someone who can do for Oral Anatomy what Dr. Netter did for Gross Anatomy. I'm actually considering writing my own text one day so that future students will be able to spend more time focusing on anatomy rather than the minutia and distractions that this book is full of. If you need to learn Oral Anatomy this is not the book that will help.

1 of 2 people found the above review helpful.
 
 
3 out of 5 stars.  Unnecessary and Disorganized, January 23, 2005
Wheeler's Dental Anatomy, Physiology and Occlusion
by Major M. Ash

It is a good book with wealth of informations but also with lots of unnecessary details/ facts. One needs to wade through complete text material before discarding all extra material, a real difficult task for a first time learner of dental anatomy especially occlusion. Some of the previous criticisms are genuine. Yet this is the only book of its kind in the market. May be one of us (dentists) should embark upon the task of writing a better monologue/ text along with clear illustrations on dental anatomy, physiology and occlusion?

2 of 3 people found the above review helpful.