4.7 Article

The biomechanical significance of the elongated rodent incisor root in the mandible during incision

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-07779-z

Keywords

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Funding

  1. University of Hull PhD studentship
  2. Natural Environment Research Council [NE/ G001952/1]
  3. NERC [NE/G001952/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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This study used finite element analysis to investigate the impact of incisor root length on the mechanical forces in rodent and aye-aye jaws. The results showed that the long incisor roots mainly resist bending forces near the incisor alveolus, but have limited effect on the overall stress distribution across the mandible.
Rodents are characterised by a distinctive masticatory apparatus which includes a single pair of enlarged and continually growing incisors. This morphology, termed diprotodonty, has also independently evolved in a number of other mammals, including the aye-aye. This study examined the functional significance of the internal root of the elongated rodent-like incisor. The mandibles of four rodents and an aye-aye were modelled to exhibit incrementally shorter incisor roots. Finite element analysis was used to predict stress and strain patterns across the jaw to determine whether the length of the incisor root contributes to the resistance of mechanical forces encountered in the mandible during incision. It was found that von Mises stresses increase in the region of the mandible local to where the incisor is removed, but that the stress distribution across the wider mandible is only minimally affected. Thus, the long internal incisor appears to play a small role in resisting bending forces close to the incisor alveolus, and may act with the arch-like mandibular shape to strengthen the mandible in this region. However, the impact across the whole mandible is relatively limited, suggesting the highly elongate incisor in diprotodont mammals may be principally driven by other factors such as rapid incisor wear.

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