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Related Concept Videos

Teeth01:15

Teeth

2.3K
The formation of teeth, also known as odontogenesis, is a complex process that begins in utero, around the sixth week of embryonic development. There are three stages to this process: the bud stage, the cap stage, and the bell stage.
In the bud stage, the tooth germ (an aggregation of cells) starts to form in the developing jawbone. During the cap stage, the tooth germ differentiates into enamel organ, dental papilla, and dental sac, which will later develop into the tooth's enamel, dentin...
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Apr 11, 2026

Measuring the Complete-arch Distortion of an Optical Dental Impression
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Data integrity in Prosthodontics: A systematic review.

Dheeraj Deepak Kalra1, Snehal Vilas Thamke2, Purvi M Bhate3

  • 1Department of Public Health Dentistry, Government Dental College & Hospital, Nagpur, Maharashtra, India.

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|April 10, 2026
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Statistical rigor in Prosthodontics research is often lacking. A systematic analysis of 328 publications revealed significant analytical flaws, highlighting the need for improved statistical review and reporting standards.

Keywords:
Prosthodonticsmethodological rigorpeer reviewresearch auditstatistical reporting

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Area of Science:

  • Clinical Research Methodology
  • Prosthodontics Statistics

Background:

  • Clinical research validity relies heavily on statistical methods.
  • Peer review frequently overlooks analytical flaws in published research.
  • Statistical errors in Prosthodontics can negatively impact evidence-based practice.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To audit the statistical rigor of publications in Prosthodontics.
  • To identify common statistical errors and their prevalence.
  • To emphasize the need for enhanced statistical review in scientific publishing.

Main Methods:

  • Systematic analysis of 328 publications.
  • Evaluation of statistical methodologies employed.
  • Identification of specific analytical flaws and reporting deficiencies.

Main Results:

  • Approximately one-third of publications demonstrated rigorous, assumption-validated statistical analyses.
  • Nearly half exhibited ambiguous or inappropriate statistical usage.
  • Common issues included lack of assumption checks, inadequate adjustment for multiple comparisons, and missing sample size justifications.

Conclusions:

  • There is an urgent need for improved editorial standards in Prosthodontics research.
  • Mandatory reporting checklists and dedicated statistical review are essential.
  • Enhancing statistical review will improve transparency and research integrity.