| Literature DB >> 28540937 |
Nigel B Pitts1, Domenick T Zero2, Phil D Marsh3, Kim Ekstrand4, Jane A Weintraub5, Francisco Ramos-Gomez6, Junji Tagami7, Svante Twetman4, Georgios Tsakos8, Amid Ismail9.
Abstract
Dental caries is a biofilm-mediated, sugar-driven, multifactorial, dynamic disease that results in the phasic demineralization and remineralization of dental hard tissues. Caries can occur throughout life, both in primary and permanent dentitions, and can damage the tooth crown and, in later life, exposed root surfaces. The balance between pathological and protective factors influences the initiation and progression of caries. This interplay between factors underpins the classification of individuals and groups into caries risk categories, allowing an increasingly tailored approach to care. Dental caries is an unevenly distributed, preventable disease with considerable economic and quality-of-life burdens. The daily use of fluoride toothpaste is seen as the main reason for the overall decline of caries worldwide over recent decades. This Primer aims to provide a global overview of caries, acknowledging the historical era dominated by restoration of tooth decay by surgical means, but focuses on current, progressive and more holistic long-term, patient-centred, tooth-preserving preventive care.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28540937 DOI: 10.1038/nrdp.2017.30
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Rev Dis Primers ISSN: 2056-676X Impact factor: 52.329