Index Of Teeth 2007 May 2026

If you are a researcher or IT administrator looking for this file, be aware of the following confusions:

Primary (Deciduous) Teeth Index in 2007: For children, the 2007 index used letters A through T. (A: Upper right second molar; J: Upper left second molar; K: Lower left second molar; T: Lower right second molar).

Archival Note: If you are searching an old hard drive or a 2007 backup disc for "index of teeth 2007," you are likely looking for a CSV file or a PDF chart mapping these 32 numbers to anatomical names (Central incisor, Lateral incisor, Canine, etc.). index of teeth 2007

While we cannot provide live, private patient data, a de-identified example of what an index of teeth from 2007 looks like in plaintext is shown below:

# Index_of_Teeth_2007_FDI_v2.1.txt
# Created: 2007-06-15
# Source: WHO Oral Health Database
#
# Format: Tooth_Code | Common_Name | Surfaces | Typical_Eruption_Year
11  "Upper right central incisor"  4  7-8
12  "Upper right lateral incisor"  4  8-9
13  "Upper right canine"  4  11-12
...
36  "Lower left first molar"  5  6-7
...
85  "Lower right second primary molar"  5  24-30 months
#
# End of index

This simple index was used to populate dropdown menus in dental EHRs and forensic comparison software. If you are a researcher or IT administrator


In the 2007 Edition, the ACHI codes were essential for capturing the treatment done on the teeth.

In 2007, dental schools and research institutions widely adopted: Archival Note: If you are searching an old

A typical index of /teeth_2007/ directory might contain subfolders like:

[DIR] radiographs/
[DIR] charts/
[DIR] forensic_cases/
[FILE] fdi_2007_standard.pdf
[FILE] tooth_eruption_timeline_2007.xls
[FILE] index_of_teeth_2007_complete.txt

For IT professionals, web archivists, or curious netizens, the keyword "index of teeth 2007" often appears in search results pointing to open directory listings (e.g., http://example.edu/teeth/index/ or http://archive.org/download/teeth_2007/).

Following the fire, 16 victims required dental identification. The forensic team used the newly digitized "Ontario Index of Teeth 2007" – a provincial database linking dental insurance codes with FDI tooth numbers. By indexing restorations (fillings, crowns, bridges) to specific tooth indices, they identified 14 victims within 72 hours.