Convertissez entre les systèmes de numérotation Universal (US), FDI/ISO (international) et Palmer pour les dents permanentes et temporaires. Cliquez sur n'importe quelle dent de l'arcade pour voir son numéro dans les trois systèmes.
Arcade supérieure (maxillaire)
Arcade inférieure
| Universel | FDI (ISO) | Palmer | Nom de la dent |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 18 | UR8 | Upper right third molar (wisdom tooth) |
| 2 | 17 | UR7 | Upper right second molar |
| 3 | 16 | UR6 | Upper right first molar |
| 4 | 15 | UR5 | Upper right second premolar |
| 5 | 14 | UR4 | Upper right first premolar |
| 6 | 13 | UR3 | Upper right canine (cuspid) |
| 7 | 12 | UR2 | Upper right lateral incisor |
| 8 | 11 | UR1 | Upper right central incisor |
| 9 | 21 | UL1 | Upper left central incisor |
| 10 | 22 | UL2 | Upper left lateral incisor |
| 11 | 23 | UL3 | Upper left canine (cuspid) |
| 12 | 24 | UL4 | Upper left first premolar |
| 13 | 25 | UL5 | Upper left second premolar |
| 14 | 26 | UL6 | Upper left first molar |
| 15 | 27 | UL7 | Upper left second molar |
| 16 | 28 | UL8 | Upper left third molar (wisdom tooth) |
| 17 | 38 | LL8 | Lower left third molar (wisdom tooth) |
| 18 | 37 | LL7 | Lower left second molar |
| 19 | 36 | LL6 | Lower left first molar |
| 20 | 35 | LL5 | Lower left second premolar |
| 21 | 34 | LL4 | Lower left first premolar |
| 22 | 33 | LL3 | Lower left canine (cuspid) |
| 23 | 32 | LL2 | Lower left lateral incisor |
| 24 | 31 | LL1 | Lower left central incisor |
| 25 | 41 | LR1 | Lower right central incisor |
| 26 | 42 | LR2 | Lower right lateral incisor |
| 27 | 43 | LR3 | Lower right canine (cuspid) |
| 28 | 44 | LR4 | Lower right first premolar |
| 29 | 45 | LR5 | Lower right second premolar |
| 30 | 46 | LR6 | Lower right first molar |
| 31 | 47 | LR7 | Lower right second molar |
| 32 | 48 | LR8 | Lower right third molar (wisdom tooth) |
| Universel | FDI (ISO) | Palmer | Nom de la dent |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | 55 | URE | Upper right primary second molar |
| B | 54 | URD | Upper right primary first molar |
| C | 53 | URC | Upper right primary canine |
| D | 52 | URB | Upper right primary lateral incisor |
| E | 51 | URA | Upper right primary central incisor |
| F | 61 | ULA | Upper left primary central incisor |
| G | 62 | ULB | Upper left primary lateral incisor |
| H | 63 | ULC | Upper left primary canine |
| I | 64 | ULD | Upper left primary first molar |
| J | 65 | ULE | Upper left primary second molar |
| K | 75 | LLE | Lower left primary second molar |
| L | 74 | LLD | Lower left primary first molar |
| M | 73 | LLC | Lower left primary canine |
| N | 72 | LLB | Lower left primary lateral incisor |
| O | 71 | LLA | Lower left primary central incisor |
| P | 81 | LRA | Lower right primary central incisor |
| Q | 82 | LRB | Lower right primary lateral incisor |
| R | 83 | LRC | Lower right primary canine |
| S | 84 | LRD | Lower right primary first molar |
| T | 85 | LRE | Lower right primary second molar |
The Universal Numbering System, endorsed by the American Dental Association (ADA), is the standard in the United States. Permanent teeth are numbered 1 through 32. Numbering begins at the upper right third molar (wisdom tooth, #1), crosses to the upper left third molar (#16), then drops to the lower left third molar (#17) and ends at the lower right third molar (#32). Primary (deciduous) teeth use letters A through T following the same path. The simplicity of a single sequential number makes it fast to dictate in clinical settings.
Le système de la Fédération Dentaire Mondiale (FDI) — publié en tant que norme ISO 3950 — est le standard mondial utilisé en Europe, en Amérique latine, en Asie et dans la plupart des pays en dehors de l'Amérique du Nord. Chaque dent est représentée par deux chiffres. Le premier chiffre désigne le quadrant : 1 = maxillaire droit, 2 = maxillaire gauche, 3 = mandibulaire gauche, 4 = mandibulaire droit pour la dentition permanente ; les quadrants 5–8 couvrent les mêmes positions pour la dentition primaire. Le deuxième chiffre identifie la dent au sein du quadrant, en comptant à partir de la ligne médiane vers l'extérieur : 1 = incisive centrale, 2 = incisive latérale, 3 = canine, 4 = première prémolaire (ou première molaire primaire), 5 = deuxième prémolaire (ou deuxième molaire primaire), 6 = première molaire, 7 = deuxième molaire, 8 = troisième molaire. Ainsi, la dent n°46 est la première molaire inférieure droite, et la n°21 est l'incisive centrale supérieure gauche. La logique structurée rend la notation FDI auto-explicative une fois que la clé des quadrants est mémorisée.
Palmer notation, developed by Corydon Palmer in 1891 and still widely used in the United Kingdom, Ireland, Australia, and parts of Canada, uses a bracket symbol (a right-angle cross) positioned around a number or letter to indicate the quadrant. The vertical bar of the bracket represents the midline; the horizontal bar represents the occlusal plane. Numbers 1–8 indicate tooth position from the midline outward for permanent teeth; letters A–E are used for primary teeth. In electronic and plain-text contexts the quadrant is typically written as a two-letter prefix: UR (upper right), UL (upper left), LR (lower right), LL (lower left). Palmer notation is visually intuitive for clinicians who think in terms of quadrant and position.
All three systems share the concept of four dental quadrants. The mouth is divided by two axes: the midline (a vertical line separating right from left) and the occlusal plane (a horizontal line separating upper from lower). Quadrant 1 (or "upper right") contains the maxillary right teeth — the patient's own right side, which appears on the left side of a frontal dental diagram (as if looking at the patient). This frequent left-right reversal in diagrams is a common source of confusion. Always clarify whether a chart is from the patient's perspective or the clinician's view.
Humans have two sets of teeth. The primary (deciduous or "baby") dentition consists of 20 teeth — 5 per quadrant: 2 incisors, 1 canine, and 2 molars. Primary teeth begin erupting around 6 months and are fully present by about age 3. Shedding begins around age 6 as the permanent successors develop beneath them. The permanent (adult) dentition has 32 teeth — 8 per quadrant: 2 incisors, 1 canine, 2 premolars, and 3 molars (including the third molar / wisdom tooth). Most people complete the permanent dentition by age 12–13, with wisdom teeth erupting in the late teens or early twenties, if at all. Dental notation charts must clearly specify which dentition is being referenced, particularly in pediatric and mixed-dentition cases where primary and permanent teeth coexist.
The most frequent conversion error is confusing patient-right with chart-left. Dental charts are traditionally drawn as if facing the patient, so the patient's upper-right quadrant appears on the left side of the diagram. A second pitfall involves assuming FDI quadrant digits match Universal numbering ranges — they do not; FDI 11 is the upper right central incisor while Universal 8 fills the same position. Third, Palmer notation in legacy paper records sometimes omits the text prefix (UR/UL/etc.) and relies on a hand-drawn bracket symbol, which can be ambiguous when digitized. When in doubt, cross-check against the tooth name (e.g., "upper right central incisor") which is unambiguous across all systems.
What is the Universal tooth numbering system?
The Universal Numbering System (ADA system) assigns numbers 1–32 to permanent adult teeth starting from the upper right third molar (#1) and ending at the lower right third molar (#32). Primary teeth use letters A–T. It is the standard system used in the United States.
What is the FDI (ISO) tooth numbering system?
The FDI Two-Digit System, published by the Fédération Dentaire Internationale and adopted by ISO, encodes each tooth as a two-digit number. The first digit indicates the quadrant (1=upper right, 2=upper left, 3=lower left, 4=lower right for permanent; 5–8 for primary). The second digit indicates the tooth within that quadrant (1=central incisor through 8=third molar). It is the international standard used outside the US.
What is Palmer notation?
Palmer notation uses a bracket symbol alongside a number (1–8) or letter (A–E) to indicate the quadrant. The bracket "opens" toward the midline of the mouth. In text form it is written as UR1–UR8 (upper right), UL1–UL8 (upper left), LR1–LR8 (lower right), LL1–LL8 (lower left). It is common in the UK, Ireland, Australia, and many Commonwealth countries.
How do I convert between Universal, FDI, and Palmer notation?
Use the converter widget above: select the system you already know, pick the tooth value, and the tool instantly shows the equivalents in all three systems plus the anatomical name. For manual conversions, match the quadrant prefix (U/L + R/L) and the tooth position number to find the corresponding FDI two-digit code.
What is the difference between primary and permanent teeth charts?
Permanent (adult) teeth number 32 in total. Primary (baby/deciduous) teeth number 20. In the Universal system, permanent teeth use numbers 1–32 and primary teeth use letters A–T. In FDI, primary teeth use quadrant digits 5–8 instead of 1–4. A child typically begins losing primary teeth around age 6 and completes the transition to permanent dentition by age 12–13, except for the third molars (wisdom teeth) which erupt later.
Which notation does DodoDentist use for clinical charting?
DodoDentist supports all three notation systems — Universal, FDI/ISO, and Palmer — so clinicians can document in whichever system their practice prefers. The notation preference is set per-practice in the clinic settings.
What are the four dental quadrants?
The mouth is divided into four quadrants by vertical (midline) and horizontal (occlusal plane) axes: upper right (maxillary right), upper left (maxillary left), lower left (mandibular left), and lower right (mandibular right). In FDI notation, quadrant 1 is upper right, 2 is upper left, 3 is lower left, and 4 is lower right for permanent teeth.
Why do wisdom teeth have three different numbers in the systems?
The upper right wisdom tooth (third molar) is #1 in Universal, #18 in FDI, and UR8 in Palmer. The differences arise because each system uses a different starting position and counting direction. Universal starts at the upper right and counts around the arch; FDI uses quadrant + position coding; Palmer brackets the midline and numbers outward.
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DodoDentist's clinical charting supports Universal, FDI, and Palmer notation — so your team can document in the system they already know.
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