Lessons learned as a student of craniofacial biology: What this might mean for orthodontic professional education and clinical practice in the 21st century

Publication date: March 2018Source: Orthodontic Waves, Volume 77, Issue 1Author(s): Harold C. SlavkinAbstractThe National Institute of Dental Research (NIDR) supported the international symposium “Congenital Anomalies of the Face and Associated Structures” led by Professor Sam Pruzansky and members of the first Dental Study Section in 1959. The plan was unique in that it examined the human face as a biological continuum, from conception through postnatal growth and development, to maturity in terms of functions, structures, and behavior. The symposium forged foundations for what we now term “craniofacial biology.” In tandem, the first grant by NIDR was funded in 1957 to Dr. Herbert K. Cooper, orthodontist, for his landmark animal and human studies of cleft lip and cleft palate. What followed were decades of multidisciplinary studies in embryology, anatomy, and physiology coupled with diagnostics, therapeutics, biomaterials, imaging, speech pathology, and studies of human behaviors to promote health and health literacy. In 1998, as Director of the NIDR, I championed a name change for the Institute to become the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research (NIDCR) to better reflect our scientific portfolio. Today I ask how craniofacial biology evolved from teratology to neural crest cell mapping, to experimental embryology, to correlating single gene mutations to phenotype(s), and knowledge of gene functions. Now in the 21st century, craniofacial biology contr...
Source: Orthodontic Waves - Category: Dentistry Source Type: research