Stratum intermedium
The stratum intermedium in a developing tooth is a layer of two or three cells between the inner enamel epithelium and the newly forming cells of the stellate reticulum. It first appears during the early bell stage of tooth development, at around the 14th week of intrauterine life. The stratum intermedium has a notably high alkaline phosphatase activity. This layer, along with the inner enamel epithelium, is responsible for the tooth enamel formation. It is a part of the dental (enamel) organ.
References
- Cate, A.R. Ten. Oral Histology: development, structure, and function. 5th ed. 1998. ISBN 0-8151-2952-1.
BKB Berkovitz, GR Holland, BJMoxham. Oral Anatomy Histology and Embryology. 3rd edition. Mosby ISBN 0-7234-3181-7
Tooth development |
---|
| -blast | |
---|
| General | |
---|
| Pulp occlusion |
- Canalis amelodentineus
- Fovea enamelea
- Fovea dentinea
|
---|
| |
---|
| Description | |
---|
| Disease |
- Developmental
- Jaw
- Neoplasms and cancer
- Injury
- Other
- Symptoms and signs
|
---|
| Treatment |
- Dentistry
- endodontology
- orthodontics
- prosthodontology
|
---|
|
|