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Surgeons’ shock after they remove 232 ‘TEETH’ from Indian teenager’s mouth 

Surgeons in Mumbai have removed an astonishing 232 teeth-like growths from the mouth of a teenager.

Ashik Gavai, 17, sought medical help after suffering swelling on the right side of his lower jaw. He was referred to the city’s JJ Hospital, where doctors found he was suffering from a condition known as complex odontoma.

Ashik Gavai, 17, was suffering from a condition known complex odontoma. He had to have 232 teeth-like growths removed in a painstaking seven-hour operation at Mumbai’s JJ Hospital

Odontomas are haphazardly arranged tooth-like growths. They are composed of enamel, dentin (the yellowish tissue that makes up the bulk of all teeth) and pulp tissue (part in the centre of a tooth made up of living connective tissue)

Odontomas are haphazardly arranged tooth-like growths. They are composed of enamel, dentin (the yellowish tissue that makes up the bulk of all teeth) and pulp tissue (part in the centre of a tooth made up of living connective tissue).

They tend to occur in people in their teenage years, such as Mr Gavai.

Mr Gavai the growths removed earlier this week, in what the surgeons believe may be a world-record operation.

They claim current literature shows a maximum of 37 teeth being removed in such a procedure.

Read more: DailyMail

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