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The ""Amex" Cast Aluminum Denture of World War I
Journal of the History of Dentistry/Vol. 49, No. 2/July 2001 |
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by John M. Hyson, Jr. DDS, MS, MA Joseph W A. Whitehorne, AB, MA, LHD, DEd
(DR. HYSON is Director of Curatorial Affairs, Dr. Samuel D. Harris National Museum of Dentistry, Associate Professor, Oral Health Care Delivery, Baltimore College of Dental Surgery, Dental School, University of Maryland, 31 South Greene Street, Baltimore, Maryland, 21201-1504. DR. WHITEHORNE is Professor of History, Lord Fairfax Community College, Box 47, Middletown, Virginia, 22645.) In 1917-18, the U.S. Army revived a denture technique first introduced in 1866 by Dr. James Baxter Bean, the Confederate dental surgeon who established the first military maxillofacial hospital trauma ward in Atlanta, Georgia, during the American Civil War the cast aluminum wartime denture. continued next column ----> |
The Amex denture was inexpensive, easily made of materials procurable in the French market, durable, light in weight, had good thermal conductivity, and was easy to clean; all of which commended its use. The denture consisted of a metal plate with metal teeth all cast together in one piece. The posterior teeth were always cast as part of the denture, but porcelain teeth could be used for the six anteriors, if time for vulcanizing could be spared. The objection to the appearance of full upper dentures with all-metal teeth had to be disregarded in view that war service efficiency outweighed esthetic considerations. Clasps for partial dentures could be incorporated into the casting. Actually, all the good qualities the Army cited for the aluminum denture in 1917-18, Dr. Bean had emphasized in his 1867 article "The Aluminum Base," in the Dental Cosmos. These were strength, lighter weight, lower cost, greater durability than Vulcanite, and ease of repair. 1 The Amex casting flask was developed from a model made of a section of a "Soixante Quinze" (75 mm) shell. The materials required for the denture were aluminum ingots, pink baseplate wax, casting wax for tooth forms, investment compound of pulverized ilex and plaster of Paris, and DuTrey's Anterior Diateric teeth. Old newspaper soaked to a pulp was to be used as a substitute for fiber asbestos in the lid of the casting flask. The average all-metal denture weighed 22 gm. and cost about six or seven cents for the metal. On November 7, 1918, all the A.E.F. dental laboratories were ordered to begin fabrication of the war denture.8 Conclusion Apparently, the Armistice of November 11, 1918 halted the mass production of these "war dentures" as examples are very rare. In fact, the extensive denture collection of the National Museum of Dentistry in Baltimore, Maryland does not include a single specimen. However, the National Museum of Dentistry does have a World War II aluminum denture with a bizarre history. In 1942, Fabian Dewine Ream and his family were captured in the Philippine Islands and interned by the Japanese. During the course of the internment, Mr. Ream lost so much weight that his mandibular denture no longer fit his mouth. When an aluminum pot fell into his possession, Ream, although not a dentist, decided he would make his own denture. With the assistance of an interned dentist, Ream made an impression of his mouth from candle paraffin. In order to invest the mold, he heated some old discarded gypsum wallboard to drive out the moisture and make plaster of Paris. Next, he melted down the aluminum pot in an old blacksmith forge and cast the denture by putting the invested, burned-out mold in a bucket and used a rope to swing it around his head centrifugal casting alA the dental technique. Although it took two tries, he finally got a decent casting and finished it with a penknife. His only problem was getting used to the thermal conductivity of the metal when taking hot liquids. Fabian Ream wore this denture (Fig. 1) for the duration of the war and even after his release in 1945. Finally, his family convinced him to see a dentist and get rid of his "metallic smile." Fabian Ream died in 1967, but his aluminum denture lived on as a "family icon" until it was donated to the Dr. Samuel D. Harris National Museum of Dentistry in 1999.' Unwittingly, he is part of a dental tradition going back to the Civil War generation. |
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References 1. Bean, J. B. The Aluminum Base. Dent Cosmos, 1867, ns, 8: 2. Boak, S. D. Director, Dental Section, Army Sanitary School, 3. Circular Letter No 13-B, The Amex Denture (Cast Aluminum), Office of the Chief Surgeon, AEF, September 30, b 1918, Folder no 1, Box 1780, E 395, RG 120, NARA. 4. Haines, G. K. Micromysteries: Stories of Scientific Detection. New York, Dodd, Mead & Co., 1988. p. 21-22. |
5. Hyson, J. M., and Foley, G. P. H. James Baxter Bean: The first military maxillofacial hospital. J MD State Dent Assoc,1997, 40: 77-81. 6. Kuttner, N. R. Letter to SD Swank, National Museum 7. Maryland Association of Dentists. Dent Cosmos, 1867, ns, 7: 376. 8. Oliver, R. T. (for Chief Surgeon, AEF), memo, November 7,1918, Folder no 1, Box 1780, E 395, RG 120, NARA. 9. Polk, R. A. Polk's Dental Register and Directory of the United States and Dominion of Canada. Detroit, RL Polk & Co, 1928,14th ed. p. 511, 663. 10. Raymond, E. H. A Type of denture for Army use. Dent Cosmos, 1918, 60: 516. |
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| Journal of the History of Dentistry Vol. 49, No. 2/july 2001 |
page 89-90
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