82 research outputs found

    Caries associated with orthodontic care part 2: management

    Get PDF
    It is recognized that wearing an orthodontic appliance increases the caries risk of the individual. The prevalence of demineralization has been reported to be as high as 73%. When demineralization occurs a number of treatments exist: fluoride application, acid microabrasion, casein phosphopeptide-amorphous calcium phosphate (CCP-ACP), resin infiltration and self-assembling peptides. Of these, topical fluoride has the most evidence to support its use. CPD/Clinical Relevance: Demineralization is the most common complication of orthodontic care. The clinician should understand how to manage this when it occurs

    Fluoridering van het drinkwater in Nederland

    No full text

    Longitudinal dental caries study in children 9–15 years of age

    No full text
    A longitudinal caries study was carried out in a group composed of fifty girls and fifty boys. The children, who were born in the same year (1945) and permanent residents of the same town were examined at the age of 9, 11, 12, 13, 14 and 15 years. The yearly examination was done by the same dentists. Special precautions were taken to avoid a shift in the standards of examination. Proximal lesions were recorded from radiograms; pit and fissure lesions and free smooth surface lesions by intra-oral examination. The number of lesions at the different ages are given separately for each specific surface and in two degrees, i.e. the total number of caries lesions, and the number of lesions which show either a carious involvement of the dentine or a break in the continuity of the enamel surface

    Some special features of the caries preventive effect of water-fluoridation

    No full text
    In March 1953 water-fluoridation was started in Tiel, the Netherlands. From the caries numbers of three age classes the differences in caries inhibition for the various teeth and for the various tooth surfaces are shown after 5 1/2 of fluoridation. The free smooth surfaces (buccal and labial) show an important caries reduction even if fluoridation started some years after the eruption of the tooth. If water-fluoridation is started 2 or 3 years before eruption the differences are hardly any greater. Some proximal surfaces show a reasonable caries reduction if water-fluoridation is started shortly after eruption. The degree of protection seems partly determined by the accessibility of the surface for fluoride ions and the condition in the interproximal space. A pre-eruptive period with fluoridated drinking-water increases the effect substantially. For the occlusal surface, only an insignificant effect was found if fluoridation was started after eruption. If fluoridation is started 2–3 years before eruption the caries inhibition was still about 50 per cent smaller than for the proximal surfaces. Only in those premolars and second molars which at the start of fluoridation were in an early stage of development, a larger caries inhibition for the occlusal surface was found. The caries inhibition in the various surfaces seems to be correlated with the degree in which fluorine ions can be built in or absorbed by the enamel of these surfaces. The degree of caries inhibition found will partly depend upon the methods used for the caries examination. In general, percentages of caries reduction tend to be higher if caries is diagnosed in a more advanced stage

    The results of 6 1/2 years of artificial fluoridation of drinking water in The Netherlands : The tiel—Culemborg experiment

    No full text
    In order to assess the effect of water fluoridation on dental caries under Dutch living conditions (food, water consumption, etc.) the drinking water of Tiel was fluoridated since 1953 at 1·1 mg/l. The nearby city of Culemborg served as control (±0·1 mg natural fluoride per litre of water). The principal study groups contained each second year the 11–15 year old children from both cities. Approximal caries was estimated from radiographs only, caries of occlusal and free smooth surfaces in a clinical examination. Both methods were standardized as far as possible. The results after 6 1/2 years of water fluoridation show an important caries inhibiting effect on caries of approximal and free smooth surfaces. The inhibition of occlusal cavities is (at the present time) far less marked. The favourable effect of this water fluoridation is in many respects similar to the results of American studies after the same interval
    • …
    corecore