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Restorative Art Introduction and Orientation Restorative Art  Mayer: page 501  “care of the deceased to recreate natural form and color”  4 objectives:     1) ease psychological effect on the family 2) make good public relations for the firm 3) lessen morbid curiosity of the public 4) professional responsibility Anatomical Position  Klicker page 14  “the body is erect, feet together, palms facing forward, and thumbs pointed away from the body” Terms of Form, Position and Direction Left and right are also in reference to the decedent’s left and right. Terms (cont’d)  Anterior and Posterior  Superior and Inferior  Medial and Lateral  Bilateral  Frontal and Profile  Planes: median, horizontal, oblique, surface  Projection and Recession Terms (cont’d)  Depression and Protrusion  Concave/Concavity and Convex/Convexity  Inclination  Symmetry and Asymmetry  Physiognomy  Norm Classes of Cases Requiring Restoration  Klicker page 81 and Mayer page 505  1) Injuries  2) Disease (Pathological)  3) Post-mortem Tissue Changes  4) Embalming  Conservative Approach (Mayer page 501) Types of Restoration  Klicker page 9  Minor Restoration: “requiring minimum effort, skill, or time to complete”  Major Restoration: “those requiring a long period of time, are extensive, require advanced technical skill, and expressed written consent to perform” Written Permission  Obtain written permission from the family before doing any restoration that requires incisions, excisions or anything that may be considered a mutiliation!! Time-table of Restorative Treatments  Klicker page 81 and Mayer page 507  Pre-embalming Treatments  Embalming Treatments  Post-embalming Treatments Ethnic Characteristics  Klicker page 12  White/European/Caucasian/Caucasoid  Black/African/Negroid  Yellow/Asiatic/Mongoloid Geometric Form of the Normal Skull  Klicker page 12  Oval with one end broader than the other.  Greatest width is compared with greatest length.  Greatest width = 2/3 the length Types of Skull  Infant:       facial portion is 1/8 the cranial area underdeveloped upper and lower jaw absence of teeth birth to 7 years: rapid growth 7 years to puberty: slow growth puberty: significant growth 22 years: sutures ossify Adult Skull  Facial portion: ½ size cranial area  Male and female develop similarly until puberty  Female: lighter and smaller     cranial capacity: 10% less walls thinner and smoother upper and lower jaws smaller infantine characteristics Aging  reduction of size of upper and lower jaws due to the loss of teeth  reduction in size of alveolar processes  reduction in vertical length of the face and an alteration in the angle of the jaw