17 resultados para premaxillary


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O gênero Achirus é composto por nove espécies distribuídas em oceanos e rios em ambos os lados da América do Norte, Central e Sul. Devido à ausência de descrições anatômicas adequadas e de um estudo recente que englobe todo o gênero, as espécies são frequentemente difíceis de serem identificadas e estudadas dentro de um contexto filogenético/biogeográfico. Nesse sentido, o presente estudo objetivou revisar a taxonomia do gênero Achirus através da análise morfológica/osteológica de algumas de suas espécies (cf. Achirus lineatus e Achirus declivis), comparando-as com os dados existentes em literatura relativos às demais espécies do gênero. Os resultados sugerem que todas as espécies são válidas, entretanto, evidencia a pouca quantidade de informações relativas às espécies Achirus mucuri e Achirus zebrinus. Achirus declivis diferiu de Achirus lineatus por possuir a região dorsal mais inclinada, o proceso ascendente do pré-maxilar do lado cego obliquamente direcionado, com o processo anterior expandido e a nadadeira peitoral desenvolvida. Achirus achirus apresentou uma distribuição consideravelmente maior do que o documentado na literatura. Adicionalmente, é apresentada uma chave de identificação englobando todas as espécies pertencentes ao gênero Achirus, bem como a revisão de sua distribuição geográfica, comparando-as com modelos biogeográficos propostos em literatura para táxons neotropicais.

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Objective: To compare and evaluate longitudinally the dental arch relationships from 4.5 to 13.5 years of age with the Bauru-BCLP Yardstick in a large sample of patients with bilateral cleft lip and palate (BCLP). Design: Retrospective longitudinal intercenter outcome study. Patients: Dental casts of 204 consecutive patients with complete BCLP were evaluated at 6, 9, and 12 years of age. All models were identified only by random identification numbers. Setting: Three cleft palate centers with different treatment protocols. Main Outcome Measures: Dental arch relationships were categorized with the Bauru-BCLP yardstick. Increments for each interval (from 6 to 9 years, 6 to 12 years, and 9 to 12 years) were analyzed by logistic and linear regression models. Results: There were no significant differences in outcome measures between the centers at age 12 or at age 9. At age 6, center B showed significantly better results (p = .027), but this difference diminished as the yardstick score for this group increased over time (linear regression analysis), the difference with the reference category (center C, boys) for the intervals 6 to 12 and 9 to 12 years being 10.4% (p = .041) and 12.9% (p = .009), respectively. Conclusions: Despite different treatment protocols, dental arch relationships in the three centers were comparable in final scores at age 9 and 12 years. Delaying hard palate closure and employing infant orthopedics did not appear to be advantageous in the long run. Premaxillary osteotomy employed in center B appeared to be associated with less favorable development of the dental arch relationship between 9 and 12 years.

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The etiologies and clinical spectra of HPE are extremely heterogeneous. Here, we report a Brazilian boy with lobar holoprosencephaly who was ascertained in a sample of 60 patients with HPE and HPE-like phenotypes and screened for molecular analysis of the major HPE causative genes: SHH, PTCH, SIX3, GLI2, and TGIF This boy presented a p.K44N (c.132G > T) mutation in exon 2 of the TGIF gene which was inherited from his phenotypically normal mother. This mutation leads to lysine to arginine amino acid change and is predicted to be a damaging mutation. Clinical aspects involving variable phenotypical manifestations in different mutations of TGIF are discussed. (c) 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)

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A new characid, Tetragonopterus anostomus, is described from the upper rio Araguaia, Central Brazil. The new species is distinguished from its congeners (T. argenteus, T. carvalhoi, T. chalceus e T. rarus) by traits related to the position of the mouth, number of premaxillary teeth, number of predorsal scales, overall color pattern, and number of gill rakers. A brief discussion on its putative ecomorphological adaptations is provided.

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Bryconamericus turiuba, new species, is described from the upper Rio Paraná system in Brazil. It differs from all congeners in the following combination of characters: 15-20 branched anal-fin rays; four or five scales in a transverse series from the dorsal-fin origin to the lateral line; shallow body (depth 23.6-30.6% of SL); 37-43 perforated lateral line scales; first, third, and fifth or, more rarely, first and fourth outer premaxillary tricuspid teeth projecting anteriorly; two to five tricuspid to pentacuspid maxillary teeth; dentary with three or four tricuspid or pentacuspid large teeth, followed by five to seven smaller conical to tricuspid teeth; a conspicuous dark, vertically elongate humeral spot, extending to below the lateral line; a dark dorsal stripe extending from the supraoccipital spine to the caudal peduncle with a gap at the adipose-fin base; caudal-fin lobes without conspicuous markings, uniformly pigmented along rays; mature males lacking hooks on the pelvic- and anal-fin rays. The new species is compared with the Bryconamericus species described from the basins of the Rio Paraná, Rio Paraguay, Rio São Francisco, and coastal Brazilian rivers. © 2005 by the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists.

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Erythrocharax altipinnis is described from the Serra do Cachimbo, Pará, Brazil. The new taxon is distinguished from all of the Characidae genera by having the pelvic bones firmly attached through the isquiatic processes; a nearly triangular hiatus in the musculature covering the anterior chamber of the swim bladder between the first and second pleural ribs (pseudotympanum); the pedunculate, notably expanded and distally compressed teeth in both jaws; circumorbital series represented by antorbital and four infraorbital bones with laterosensory canals not enclosed; a single tooth row in the premaxillary with the teeth perfectly aligned and similar in shape and cusp number; the first three branched dorsal-fin rays distinctly elongate in males; a bright red adipose and caudal fins in life; a conspicuous dark midlateral stripe extending from the opercle to the tip of the median caudal-fin rays; and by the absence of a humeral spot. The phylogenetic position of the new taxon is discussed using morphological and molecular datasets, with conflicting results of both approaches discussed. Additionally, a summarized discussion on the current problems in the Characidae taxonomy is presented and the principal biases in the morphological dataset are also discussed. © 2013 Netto-Ferreira et al.

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O gênero Tometes Valenciennes, 1850 foi descrito originalmente para abrigar a espécie-tipo T. trilobatus, por apresentar dentes incisiformes bi- a tricuspidados. No entanto, o gênero foi colocado como sinonímia de Myleus Müller e Troschell, 1844 onde ficou por aproximadamente um século e meio até a sua revalidação. A revalidação do gênero e da espécie-tipo propiciou a descrição de outras duas espécies, T. lebaili e T. makue. O presente estudo apresenta uma revisão taxonômica de Tometes para o escudo das Guianas onde as três espécies nominais são reconhecidas válidas e aqui re-descritas, e uma nova espécie para a bacia do rio Trombetas foi caracterizada, ampliando a diversidade e a área de distribuição do gênero. Dentre as características principais de diagnose das espécies foi observado: T. trilobatus é diagnosticado dos demais congêneres por apresentar dentes no dentário e pré-maxilar com cúspide central com cume baixo e arredondado (vs. dentes com cúspide central ou cúspide principal com cume alto e agudo). T. lebaili é diferenciado por apresentar boca oblíqua orientada dorsalmente (vs. boca terminal). T. makue possui o menor número de espinhos na serra pré-pélvica, sempre entre 0 e 9 espinhos pré-pélvicos (vs. mais de 9 espinhos pré-pélvicos). Já a espécie nova apresenta o perfil dorsal do neurocrânio com uma suave concavidade ao nível da barra epifiseal e tamanho de escamas irregulares sobre o flanco (vs. perfil dorsal do neurocrânio retilíneo e escamas de tamanho regular sobre todo o flanco). Todas as espécies de Tometes são estritamente reofílicas e ocorrem exclusivamente nas zonas encachoeiradas dos rios de escudo, biótopos complexos, frágeis e ameaçados por ações antropogênicas. As conclusões deste estudo destacam o desafio urgente quanto à compreensão das relações espécies/habitat.

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Guiler, Burton and Gales (1987) reported a cranium (Tasmanian Museum No. A141 1) they identified as belonging to Burmeister’s porpoise, Phocoena spinipinnis Burmeister, 1865 from Heard Island (53°S 73°30’E). They noted that P. spinipinnis was previously known only from the cold-temperate coastal waters of South America and claimed that this cranium was evidence that the species has a much wider distribution than previously known. We have examined the photographs and details of their specimen and re-identify it here as Australophocaena dioptrica (Lahille, 1912) (family Phocoenidae). Barnes (1985) listed several features that distinguish the skulls of species within the subfamily Phocoenoidinae (including A. dioptrica) from those species within the Phocoeninae (including Phocoena spp.). Features that distinguish A. dioptrica from P. spinipinnis, dearly visible in the published photographs of the cranium from Heard Island, include: a relatively small, oval-shaped temporal fossa; an elevated, high-vaulted braincase that slopes abruptly onto the narial region; relatively large, high and convex premaxillary bosses; dorso-ventrally expanded zygomatic process of the squamosal; short and antetoposteriorly expanded postorbital process of the fronds; and maxillae extendmg nearly to the dorsal margin of the supraoccipital on the top of the skull. In all these features, the Heard Island specimen conforms with those of A. dioptrica. Crania of A. dioptrica have been illustrated by Hamilton (1941), Norris and McFarland (1958), Brownell (1975), Fordyce et al. (1984), and Barnes (1985). Crania of P. spinipinnis have been illustrated by Norris and McFarland (1958) and Brownell and Praderi (1984).