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In their contribution to the first edition of this Handbook,
entitled "The Teeth," LEHNER and PLENK (1936) discussed the tissues
constituting the "perio dontium" rather briefly. In contrast to the
detailed paragraphs dealing with, for example, enamel and dentine,
the section (about 40 pages and 20 illustra tions, mostly drawings)
devoted to periodontal tissues failed to provide a factual review
and summary of the contemporary knowledge and latest developments
in research on the various components of the periodontium. Instead,
much of the text was an attempt to arrive at conclusions from often
purely semantic speculations, playing the various schools of
thought against each other, provid ing arguments in favor of the
authors' views and arguments for the feasibility and probability of
accepting or rejecting the often diverse opinions, while the reader
was referred to the already existing literature for factual
details. Since 1936, however, factual details ofthe structural
biology of the periodon tal tissues, i. e. their development,
structure, function, and physiology, have been greatly extended and
have been internationally accepted. With much less opin ionated
belief to cope with, this knowledge has formed the solid foundation
upon which diagnosis, prevention, and treatment in the fields of
clinical perio dontology, modem orthodontics, and re- and
transplantation procedures of teeth have been built."
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