Sex differences in craniofacial morphology

Abstract
An x-ray cephalometric study was performed in a male and a female group of Danish dental students with the object of examining the sex-determined component of the cranial morphology, and of obtaining a control material for subsequent studies of pathologic samples. The cranial morphology was examined on the basis of measurements on x-ray cephalometric lateral and postero-anterior radiographs. The cranium was, on an average, smaller in the female than the male group except as regards the nasal bone, the foramen magnum and the inner orbital distance. The female group showed a more prominent frontal bone, and a less prominent nasal bone, than the male group.