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Dental Erosion

Journal of Esthetic and Restorative Dentistry, 2013
The media are finally beginning to inform the general public that they are at risk for dental erosion as a result of the foods and the beverages they consume. Dental erosion or erosive tooth wear not only can be caused by extrinsic (dietary) acids but also intrinsic acids.
Kristi Erickson   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Diagnosis of dental erosion

Clinical Dentistry Reviewed, 2015
Dental erosion is an acid-mediated tissue loss without bacterial involvement. It occurs on occlusal and smooth surfaces and is a surface phenomenon. The diagnosis can therefore be easily made by visual inspection. In initial stages, the normal surface texture and lustre of enamel is lost.
Carolina Ganss, Nadine Schlueter
openaire   +2 more sources

Dental erosion and diet

Journal of Dentistry, 1974
Abstract A survey is reported of 26 cases of tooth erosion. The appearance and distribution of the lesions are described and an attempt is made to relate them to dietary factors.
J D, Eccles, W G, Jenkins
openaire   +2 more sources

Tooth wear--dental erosion

British Dental Journal, 1996
This article aims to address the issues arising out of the increasing concern by general dental practitioners of erosion-related tooth wear. The prevalence, common presentation, differential diagnosis, likely aetiology, prevention and management of suspected cases of this form of tooth wear are considered.
J, Nunn, L, Shaw, A, Smith
openaire   +2 more sources

Diet and dental erosion

Nutrition, 2002
Dental erosion (erosive tooth wear) is the result of a pathologic, chronic, localized loss of dental hard tissue that is chemically etched away from the tooth surface by acid and/or chelation without bacterial involvement. Acids of intrinsic (gastrointestinal) and extrinsic (dietary and environmental) origin are the main etiologic factors.
Paula Moynihan   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Dental Erosion: II. Clinical Measurements of Dental Erosion Progress

The Journal of the American Dental Association, 1972
With the use of profile tracings obtained by replication of clinical specimens of erosion-like lesions, we observed an average per day rate of erosion progress in teeth of approximately 1μ. Over five months, the progress of erosion remained the same on lesions that were treated with a sodium fluoride paste and on those left untreated in the same ...
Frida A. Xhonga   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Dental Erosion in Children

2006
Erosive tooth wear in children is a common condition. The overlapping of erosion with mechanical forces like attrition or abrasion is probably in deciduous teeth more pronounced than in permanent teeth. Early erosive damage to the permanent teeth may compromise the dentition for the entire lifetime and require extensive restorative procedures ...
A, Lussi, T, Jaeggi
openaire   +2 more sources

Dental erosion

British Dental Journal, 1995
A J, Smith, L, Shaw
openaire   +3 more sources

Dental erosion

Dental Abstracts, 2010
Vikki, Noonan, Sadru, Kabani
openaire   +3 more sources

Dental Erosion

2006
List of Contributors Acknowledgments Foreword: Angmar-Mansson, B. Erosive Tooth Wear - A Multifactorial Condition of Growing Concern and Increasing Knowledge: Lussi, A. Definition of Erosion and Links to Tooth Wear: Ganss, C. Interaction between Attrition, Abrasion and Erosion in the Tooth Wear: Addy, M. Shellis, R.P.
openaire   +1 more source

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