Dr. Anjali Sharma, a new dental resident, stared at the blinking cursor on her laptop. Her viva voce on Dental Anatomy was in less than twelve hours. The professor, Dr. Arvind Mehta, was legendary for two things: his encyclopedic knowledge of tooth morphology and his terrifying habit of asking questions that weren’t in any textbook.
The next morning, the viva began. Dr. Mehta asked the standard questions. Anjali answered crisply. Then he leaned forward. dental anatomy viva questions pdf
She scrolled on. The questions grew stranger, more philosophical. Question 63: “A child brings you a tooth. It is not a deciduous canine, but its root is half the length of a permanent one. The enamel shows no caries, yet the dentin is exposed. What trauma from three years ago explains this, and which tooth bud did it damage?” Her heart raced. She grabbed a notepad and sketched possible answers, visualizing the development of the tooth germ, the timeline of eruption. The professor, Dr
“Fifty-three seconds,” she whispered to herself. “The occlusal table is rhomboid. Central fossa is slightly mesial. There are… seven supplemental grooves radiating from the central pit, not five. And the distal marginal ridge is tilted buccally by about fifteen degrees.” the timeline of eruption. “Fifty-three seconds
She downloaded it. The first few pages were normal: “Describe the lingual fossa of a maxillary lateral incisor.” “What is the function of the transverse ridge of a maxillary molar?”
Desperate, Anjali stumbled upon a forgotten corner of the college’s internal server. A single file: