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Sumit Yadav

Researcher at University of Connecticut

Publications -  168
Citations -  2104

Sumit Yadav is an academic researcher from University of Connecticut. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 132 publications receiving 1452 citations. Previous affiliations of Sumit Yadav include Indira Gandhi Institute of Technology & University of Connecticut Health Center.

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Treatment effects of mini-implants for en-masse retraction of anterior teeth in bialveolar dental protrusion patients: A randomized controlled trial

TL;DR: Mini-implants provided absolute anchorage to allow greater skeletal, dental, and esthetic changes in patients requiring maximum anterior retraction, when compared with other conventional methods of space closure.
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Mini-implant anchorage for en-masse retraction of maxillary anterior teeth: A clinical cephalometric study

TL;DR: Mini-implants are efficient for intraoral anchorage reinforcement for en-masse retraction and intrusion of maxillary anterior teeth in patients requiring high anchorage after extraction of the maxillary first premolars.
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Temporomandibular Joint Disorders in Older Adults.

TL;DR: The evidence of temporomandibualar joint (TMJ) disorders in older adults, focusing on clinical manifestations of TMDs, highlighting the incidence and sexual dimorphism of TMJ degeneration and the role of sex hormones in this process, and providing potential treatment options for TMD in adults as discussed by the authors.
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Microdamage of the cortical bone during mini-implant insertion with self-drilling and self-tapping techniques: A randomized controlled trial

TL;DR: This study demonstrated greater microdamage in the cortical bones of adult hounds in both the maxilla and the mandible by theSelf-drilling insertion technique compared with the self-tapping technique.
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Cell and matrix response of temporomandibular cartilage to mechanical loading

TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of loading on the temporomandibular joint (TMJ) was investigated in transgenic mice with different combinations of fluorescent proteins (Dkk3-eGFP, Col1a1(3.6 ǫ)-GFPtpz, Col2a1-GFPcyan, and Col10a1 (RFPcherry) in the mandibular condylar cartilage.