98 results on '"Roger Ellwood"'
Search Results
2. Validation of a Tooth-Imaging System in Tooth-Whitening Trials.
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Wen Luo, Stephen Westland, Roger Ellwood, Paul Brunton, and Iain A. Pretty
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- 2006
3. Testing the Performance of a Modified Whiteness Formula for Dentistry.
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Wen Luo, Stephen Westland, Iain A. Pretty, and Roger Ellwood
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- 2005
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4. European organization for caries research workshop: methodology for determination of potentially available fluoride in toothpastes
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Arif Ali Baig, Frank Lippert, Andreas G. Schulte, Joana Christina Carvalho, Walter Plett, Domenick T. Zero, Peter Bottenberg, Cor van Loveren, Kim R. Ekstrand, Fábio Correia Sampaio, Jaime Aparecido Cury, Andrew Joiner, Stephen Mason, Michael Knapp, David J. Manton, Christopher J. Holmgren, Anahita Jablonski-Momeni, Clifton M. Carey, M.J. Buijs, Carlos González-Cabezas, Roger Ellwood, Carolina Ganss, Chris Rahiotis, E. Angeles Martinez-Mier, Stefania Martignon, Livia Maria Andaló Tenuta, Alan Ceresa, Habib Benzian, Cariologie (OII, ACTA), Preventieve tandheelkunde (OII, ACTA), UCL - SSS/IRSS - Institut de recherche santé et société, UCL - (SLuc) Service de dentisterie pédiatrique et de soins bucco-dentaires pour personnes à besoins particuliers, Dental Clinic, Conservative Dentistry and Prosthodontics, Dentistry, Surgical clinical sciences, Oral Health, Cariology, Preventive Dentistry, and Martignon, Stefania [0000-0002-6505-8356]
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Fluoride Analysis ,business.product_category ,Fluoruros ,Computer science ,Best practice ,Productos para la higiene dental y bucal ,Dental Caries ,Research Workshop ,Oral cavity ,Dentífricos ,Terminology ,Tooth brushing ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Fluorides ,0302 clinical medicine ,SDG 17 - Partnerships for the Goals ,Research Workshop · Fluoride · Fluoride Analysis · Toothpastes · Available Fluoride ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Fluoride ,General Dentistry ,Medical education ,Toothpaste ,Available Fluoride ,Reproducibility of Results ,030206 dentistry ,Cariostatic Agents ,chemistry ,business ,Toothpastes - Abstract
Toothpastes are the most universally accepted form of fluoride delivery for caries prevention. To provide anti-caries benefits, they must be able to release fluoride during the time of tooth brushing or post brushing into the oral cavity. However, there is no standard accepted procedure to measure how much fluoride in a toothpaste may be (bio) available for release. The European Organization for Caries Research proposed and supported a workshop with experts in fluoride analysis in toothpastes and representatives from industry. The objective of the workshop was to discuss issues surrounding fluoride analysis in toothpaste and reach consensus on terminology and best practices, wherever the available evidence allowed it. Participants received a background paper and heard presentations followed by structured discussion to define the problem. The group also reviewed evidence on the validity, reliability and feasibility of each technique (namely chromatography and fluoride electroanalysis) and discussed their strengths and limitations. Participants were able to reach a consensus on terminology and were also able to identify and summarize the advantages and disadvantages of each technique. However, they agreed that most currently available methods were developed for regulatory agencies several decades ago, utilizing the best available data from clinical trials then, but require to be updated. They also agreed that although significant advances to our understanding of the mechanism of action of fluoride in toothpaste have been achieved over the past 4 decades, this clearly is an extraordinarily complex subject and more work remains to be done.
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- 2019
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5. Comparison of three methods for monitoring dentin erosion progression
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Shelon Cristina Souza Pinto, Suellen Nogueira Linares Lima, Maria Vitoria Nassif, Christian Zakian, Hooi Pin Chew, Ian Pretty, Roger Ellwood, José Eduardo Cezar Sampaio, and Matheus Bandeca
- Abstract
Background: Clinical assessment and monitoring of dental erosion in vivo is challenging, although a number of clinical indices have been proposed but these are unlikely to be sensitive enough to quantify erosion with sufficient sensitivity to allow comparison of different therapies. In this respect, some of the techniques predominantly employed for the assessment of dental caries such as Quantitative light- induced fluorescence (QLF) and Optical coherence tomography (OCT) may also have utility for the assessment for erosion both in vivo and in vitro. The aim of the present study was to test three techniques (QLF, OCT and SMH) for the assessment of dentine erosion in a product testing model, using dentifrices to reduce erosion susceptibility. Dentine erosion was evaluated comparing the methods. Methods: Human dentine specimens were treated with one of two dentifrice slurries or mineral water (control group), followed by an erosive challenge and storage overnight in artificial saliva. These procedures were performed over 5 days. The following two dentifrices were tested: Duraphat™ 5000 (5000ppm Sodium Fluoride) and Colgate Sensitive Pro-Relief™ (8% arginine plus calcium carbonate and 1450ppm Fluoride). All groups showed a progressivedecrease in SMH and increase in scattering for OCT (P0.05). Conclusion: SMH and OCT techniques were able to detect a significant protective effect against in vitro erosion whensamples were pre-treated with either dentifrice formulation. Dentifrices containing high concentrations of fluoride andarginine associated with calcium carbonate and fluoride have a protective effect against dentinal erosion.
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- 2020
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6. Role of microbial biofilms in the maintenance of oral health and in the development of dental caries and periodontal diseases
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Jaime Aparecido Cury, Michael A. Curtis, Mariano Sanz, David Herrera, Irene Dige, Marc Quirynen, Mark C. Herzberg, Joerg Meyle, Andrea Mombelli, Rodrigo A. Giacaman, Egija Zaura, David Beighton, Eric C. Reynolds, Henrik Dommisch, Eija Könönen, Lior Shapira, Roger Ellwood, Philip Marsh, Alex Mira, Ana Molina, Preventieve tandheelkunde (OII, ACTA), and Preventive Dentistry
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0301 basic medicine ,Veillonella ,microbial interactions ,Oral Health ,symbiosis ,Disease ,Dental Caries ,Microbiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Gingivitis ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,caries ,Humans ,periodontal diseases ,Periodontitis ,innate host responses ,biology ,Biofilm ,dysbiosis ,030206 dentistry ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,ddc:617.6 ,030104 developmental biology ,dental biofilm ,Oral microbiology ,Biofilms ,Host-Pathogen Interactions ,Periodontics ,medicine.symptom ,Dysbiosis ,Actinomyces - Abstract
Background and Aims: The scope of this working group was to review (1) ecological interactions at the dental biofilm in health and disease, (2) the role of microbial communities in the pathogenesis of periodontitis and caries, and (3) the innate host response in caries and periodontal diseases. Results and Conclusions: A health-associated biofilm includes genera such as Neisseria, Streptococcus, Actinomyces, Veillonella and Granulicatella. Microorganisms associated with both caries and periodontal diseases are metabolically highly specialized and organized as multispecies microbial biofilms. Progression of these diseases involves multiple microbial interactions driven by different stressors. In caries, the exposure of dental biofilms to dietary sugars and their fermentation to organic acids results in increasing proportions of acidogenic and aciduric species. In gingivitis, plaque accumulation at the gingival margin leads to inflammation and increasing proportions of proteolytic and often obligately anaerobic species. The natural mucosal barriers and saliva are the main innate defence mechanisms against soft tissue bacterial invasion. Similarly, enamel and dentin are important hard tissue barriers to the caries process. Given that the present state of knowledge suggests that the aetiologies of caries and periodontal diseases are mutually independent, the elements of innate immunity that appear to contribute to resistance to both are somewhat coincidental.
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- 2017
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7. A yellowness index for use in dentistry
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Qianqian Pan, Roger Ellwood, Stephen Westland, and Chelsea Sullivan
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Index (economics) ,Coefficient of determination ,Prosthesis Coloring ,Color ,030206 dentistry ,Correlation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Dentistry ,Statistics ,Tooth Bleaching ,Tooth color ,Humans ,Tooth Discoloration ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Set (psychology) ,General Dentistry ,Tooth ,Mathematics - Abstract
Objectives To develop an equation that predicts the perceptual yellowness of teeth. Methods A large set of new psychophysical yellowness data were generated from an experiment where 500 participants each ranked a set of 58 shade guide samples. Two existing equations (WIO and b*) and one new equation (YIO) were evaluated by comparing their values for the 58 shade guide tabs with the psychophysical data. Coefficient of determination (r2), ‘% wrong decisions’, and STRESS were used as measures of performance. The YIO equation was optimized using these data to maximize the r2 value. A validation set of psychophysical data was prepared in an experiment where 40 participants each ranked 5 sets of 9 samples that were viewed on an emissive display. The candidate equations were evaluated using these data and the r2, %WD, and STRESS metrics. Results All three metrics YIO, WIO and b* were strongly correlated with perceptual yellowness. YIO and WIO both showed stronger correlation than b*. Conclusions A new yellowness equation YIO has been developed to correlate with tooth yellowness. It is suggested that tooth yellowness and whiteness are highly related concepts.
- Published
- 2019
8. Fibre-Optic Transillumination: FOTI
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Richard Hogan, Iain A. Pretty, and Roger Ellwood
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Optical fiber ,Sound tooth ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Transillumination ,law.invention ,Clinical Practice ,law ,Ophthalmology ,Medicine ,Contrast (vision) ,business ,media_common - Abstract
Transillumination of teeth has been advocated for caries detection for over 100 years and requires minimal experience to implement in clinical practice. Fibre-optic light sources are readily available and when used appropriately, help to enhance the contrast between sound tooth tissue and caries lesions. To improve the validity of fibre-optic transillumination (FOTI), a scoring index is available to enable the combined assessment of lesions using ICDAS and FOTI.
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- 2019
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9. Comment on the Paper Entitled 'Arginine and Caries Prevention: A Systematic Review'
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William DeVizio and Roger Ellwood
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Arginine ,business.industry ,MEDLINE ,Dentistry ,030206 dentistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Medicine ,Cariostatic Agents ,business ,Intensive care medicine ,General Dentistry - Published
- 2017
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10. Evaluation of colorimetric indices for the assessment of tooth whiteness
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Roger Ellwood, Stephen Westland, and Qianqian Pan
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Adult ,Male ,Visual perception ,Index (economics) ,Adolescent ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Decision Making ,Color ,01 natural sciences ,010309 optics ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Perception ,0103 physical sciences ,Statistics ,Tooth Bleaching ,Humans ,General Dentistry ,Mathematics ,media_common ,Measure (data warehouse) ,030206 dentistry ,Middle Aged ,Tooth Discoloration ,Test performance ,Colorimetry ,Female ,Tooth - Abstract
ObjectivesTo evaluate the performance of existing equations that measure perceptual whiteness of teeth.MethodsThree new psychophysical experiments were conducted and combined with two previously published experiments to form a large set of data to test performance of whiteness indices. Three whiteness indices (WIC, WIO, WID,) were compared with regard to their ability to measure perceived whiteness. Coefficient of determination (r2) and ‘% wrong decisions’ were used as measures of performance. One of the new experiments involved 500 participants across five different countries to explore the effect of gender, age and culture on whiteness perception.ResultsEquations (WIO and WID) that have been optimized for use with tooth whiteness better correlated with visual perceptions of changes in tooth whiteness than the more general CIE whiteness index (WIC). The best performance was given by WIO (in terms of both r2 and % wrong decisions). No effect of age, gender or culture was found on whiteness perception.ConclusionsWIO is a robust method for assessing whiteness of human teeth.
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- 2018
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11. Automatic detection and classification of dental fluorosis in vivo using white light and fluorescence imaging
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Iain A. Pretty, Michaela Goodwin, Zhao Liu, Roger Ellwood, and Michael G McGrady
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Adolescent ,Fluorosis, Dental ,Light ,Severity of Illness Index ,Fluorescence ,03 medical and health sciences ,Automation ,Fluorosis ,Fluorides ,0302 clinical medicine ,Fluoridation ,White light ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Maxilla ,Prevalence ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Water fluoridation ,Child ,General Dentistry ,Reference standards ,business.industry ,Dentistry(all) ,Optical Imaging ,Reproducibility of Results ,Pattern recognition ,030206 dentistry ,medicine.disease ,Thresholding ,United Kingdom ,Incisor ,Detection ,TF index ,Photography, Dental ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,Tooth stain ,Dental fluorosis - Abstract
Objectives: To assess a novel method of automatic fluorosis detection and classification from white light and fluorescent images. Methods: Dental images from 1,729 children living in two fluoridates and two non-fluoridated UK cities were utilised. A novel detection and classification algorithm was applied to each image and TF scores were obtained using thresholding criteria. These were compared to clinical reference standard images. Comparisons between reference and automated assessments were undertaken to record correct and incorrect classifications and the ability of the system to separate the fluoridated and non-fluoridated populations. Results: The automated system performed well and was able to differentiate the two populations (P < 0.0001) to the same degree as the reference standard. When using the highest score from the clinical assessment the agreement between automated and clinical assessments was 0.56 (Kappa SE = 0.0160, p < 0.0001). Conclusions: Assessment of dental fluorosis is typically undertaken by clinical examiners in epidemiological studies. The training and calibration of such examiners is complex and time consuming and the assessments are subject to bias – frequently because of the examiner's awareness of the water fluoridation status of subjects. The use of remote scoring using photographs has been advocated but still requires trained examiners. This study has shown that image-processing methodologies applied to white light and fluorescent images could automatically score fluorosis and statistically separate fluoridated and non-fluoridated areas. The system requires further refinement to manage confounding factors such as the presence of non-fluoride opacities and tooth stain.
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- 2018
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12. Digital epidemiology - Calibrating readers to score dental images remotely
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Bruce A. Dye, Michaela Goodwin, Roger Ellwood, and Iain A. Pretty
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medicine.medical_specialty ,National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey ,Adolescent ,Fluorosis, Dental ,Epidemiology ,Concordance ,Ordinal Scale ,03 medical and health sciences ,Digital image ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Dental public health ,NHANES ,Training ,Humans ,Medical physics ,Child ,Dental Enamel ,General Dentistry ,Observer Variation ,030505 public health ,Dentistry(all) ,business.industry ,Data quality ,Reproducibility of Results ,030206 dentistry ,medicine.disease ,Nutrition Surveys ,Inter-examiner reliability ,Data Accuracy ,Dental fluorosis ,Incisor ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Photography, Dental ,Calibration ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Kappa - Abstract
Background There is growing interest to use digital photographs in dental epidemiology. However, the reporting of procedures and metric-based performance outcomes from training to promote data quality prior to actual scoring of digital images has not been optimal. Methods A training study was undertaken to assess training methodology and to select a group of scorers to assess images for dental fluorosis captured during the 2013–2014 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). Ten examiners and 2 reference examiners assessed dental fluorosis using the Deans Index (DI) and the Thylstrup-Fejerskov (TF) Index. Trainees were evaluated using 128 digital images of upper anterior central incisors at three different periods and with approximately 40 participants during two other periods. Scoring of all digital images was done using a secured, web-based system. Results When assessing for nominal fluorosis (apparent vs. non-apparent), the unweighted Kappa for DI ranged from 0.68 to 0.77 and when using an ordinal scale, the linear-weighted kappa for DI ranged from 0.43 to 0.69 during the final evaluation. When assessing for nominal fluorosis using TF, the unweighted Kappa ranged from 0.67 to 0.89 and when using an ordinal scale, the linear-weighted kappa for TF ranged from 0.61 to 0.77 during the final evaluation. No examiner improvement was observed when a clinical assessment feature was added during training to assess dental fluorosis using TF, results using DI was less clear. Conclusion Providing examiners theoretical material and scoring criteria prior to training may be minimally sufficient to calibrate examiners to score digital photographs. There may be some benefit in providing an in-person training to discuss criteria and review previously scored images. Previous experience as a clinical examiner seems to provide a slight advantage at scoring photographs for DI, but minimizing the number of scorers does improve inter-examiner concordance for both DI and TF.
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- 2018
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13. Brain Functional Changes before, during, and after Clinical Pain
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M.C. Bender, Emily Bellile, D Burnett, Alexandre F. DaSilva, Xiao-Su Hu, Roger Ellwood, A.J. Racek, L. Khatib, Ioulia Kovelman, R McMahan, Rebecca L. Toback, and Thiago D. Nascimento
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Adult ,Male ,Hemodynamics ,Pain ,Prefrontal Cortex ,Sensory system ,Somatosensory system ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Neuroimaging ,Medicine ,Humans ,Prefrontal cortex ,General Dentistry ,Spectroscopy, Near-Infrared ,business.industry ,Functional Neuroimaging ,Brain ,Research Reports ,030206 dentistry ,Somatosensory Cortex ,medicine.disease ,Pain stimulus ,Cold Temperature ,Anesthesia ,Functional near-infrared spectroscopy ,Dentin hypersensitivity ,Neurovascular Coupling ,Female ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
This study used an emerging brain imaging technique, functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS), to investigate functional brain activation and connectivity that modulates sometimes traumatic pain experience in a clinical setting. Hemodynamic responses were recorded at bilateral somatosensory (S1) and prefrontal cortices (PFCs) from 12 patients with dentin hypersensitivity in a dental chair before, during, and after clinical pain. Clinical dental pain was triggered with 20 consecutive descending cold stimulations (32° to 0°C) to the affected teeth. We used a partial least squares path modeling framework to link patients' clinical pain experience with recorded hemodynamic responses at sequential stages and baseline resting-state functional connectivity (RSFC). Hemodynamic responses at PFC/S1 were sequentially elicited by expectation, cold detection, and pain perception at a high-level coefficient (coefficients: 0.92, 0.98, and 0.99, P < 0.05). We found that the pain ratings were positively affected only at a moderate level of coefficients by such sequence of functional activation (coefficient: 0.52, P < 0.05) and the baseline PFC-S1 RSFC (coefficient: 0.59, P < 0.05). Furthermore, when the dental pain had finally subsided, the PFC increased its functional connection with the affected S1 orofacial region contralateral to the pain stimulus and, in contrast, decreased with the ipsilateral homuncular S1 regions ( P < 0.05). Our study indicated for the first time that patients' clinical pain experience in the dental chair can be predicted concomitantly by their baseline functional connectivity between S1 and PFC, as well as their sequence of ongoing hemodynamic responses. In addition, this linked cascade of events had immediate after-effects on the patients' brain connectivity, even when clinical pain had already ceased. Our findings offer a better understating of the ongoing impact of affective and sensory experience in the brain before, during, and after clinical dental pain.
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- 2018
14. Effect of Optical Coherence Tomography Resolution on the Assessment of Dental Enamel Indications
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Mark C. Pierce, Christine C. Sahyoun, Roger Ellwood, Latonya Kilpatrick, Lynette Zaidel, Hrebesh M. Subhash, and Deborah A. Peru
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Materials science ,genetic structures ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Dental enamel ,Resolution (electron density) ,eye diseases ,Visualization ,stomatognathic diseases ,Optics ,stomatognathic system ,Optical coherence tomography ,medicine ,sense organs ,business ,Image resolution ,Preclinical imaging - Abstract
We have implemented optical coherence tomography with different light sources and imaging optics to provide varying spatial resolution and field-of-view. We examined the impact of these parameters on visualization and quantification of dental enamel indications.
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- 2018
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15. Toothpaste Prevents Debonded Brackets on Erosive Enamel
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Ian Pretty, Roger Ellwood, Shelon Cristina Souza Pinto, Álvaro Henrique Borges, Mateus Rodrigues Tonetto, Matheus Coelho Bandeca, and Érico Luiz Damasceno Barros
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business.product_category ,Article Subject ,Orthodontic Brackets ,lcsh:Medicine ,Dentistry ,lcsh:Technology ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Phosphates ,Fluorides ,Fluoride dentifrice ,Dentifrice ,Animals ,Tooth Erosion ,Dental Enamel ,lcsh:Science ,General Environmental Science ,Toothpaste ,Enamel paint ,lcsh:T ,business.industry ,Bond strength ,Chemistry ,lcsh:R ,Significant difference ,General Medicine ,High fluoride ,Distilled water ,visual_art ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Sodium Fluoride ,Cattle ,lcsh:Q ,business ,Toothpastes ,Research Article - Abstract
This study evaluated the effect of high fluoride dentifrice on the bond strength of brackets after erosive challenge. Eighty-four enamel specimens were divided into seven groups(n=12): WN (distilled water/no acid challenge), W3C (distilled water/3 cycles of acid challenge), and W6C (distilled water/6 cycles of acid challenge) were not submitted to dentifrice treatment. Groups RF3C (regular fluoride dentifrice/3 cycles of acid challenge) and RF6C (regular fluoride dentifrice/6 cycles of acid challenge) were treated with dentifrices containing 1450 μg F−/g and HF3C (high fluoride dentifrice/3 cycles of acid challenge) and HF6C (high fluoride dentifrice/6 cycles of acid challenge) were with 5000 μg F−/g. Acid challenges were performed for seven days. After bond strength test, there was no significant difference among groups submitted to 3 cycles of acid challenge(P>0.05). Statistically significant difference was found between the regular and high fluoride dentifrices after 6 cycles of acid challenge (
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- 2015
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16. Red fluorescence imaging for dental plaque detection and quantification:pilot study
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Zhao Liu, Roger Ellwood, Soniya Khan, Juliana Gomez, and Deborah A. Peru
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0301 basic medicine ,Adult ,030103 biophysics ,Fluorescence-lifetime imaging microscopy ,dental plaque ,Dental Plaque ,Biomedical Engineering ,Dentistry ,Pilot Projects ,Dental plaque ,Oral hygiene ,autofluorescence imaging ,Biomaterials ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Computer analysis ,Medicine ,Humans ,Red fluorescence ,Aged ,business.industry ,Dental Plaque Index ,Optical Imaging ,Healthy subjects ,oral hygiene ,030206 dentistry ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,RUSBoost classifier ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Autofluorescence ,Clinical diagnosis ,computer analysis ,business - Abstract
The red fluorescence of dental plaque originating from porphyrins in oral bacteria may allow visualization, detection, and scoring of plaque without disclosing agents. Two studies were conducted. The first included 24 healthy participants who abstained from oral hygiene for 24 h. Dental plaque was collected from tooth surfaces, and a 10% solution was prepared. These were scanned by a molecular spectrometer to identify the optimum excitation and emission wavelengths of plaque for developing a red fluorescence imaging system. Fourteen healthy subjects completed the second study. After a washout period (1 week), participants had a prophylaxis at baseline and abstained from oral hygiene during the study. They were monitored using the fluorescence imaging system at baseline, 24 h, and 48 h. A dentist clinically assessed plaque after disclosing and on red fluorescence images. Three descriptors were extracted from images and a RUSBoost classifier derived computer fluorescence scores through cross-validation. Red fluorescence plaque levels increased during the 48-h accumulation. Plaque progression was identified by dentist assessment and computer analysis, presenting significant differences between visits at tooth and subject levels (p
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- 2017
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17. Comparison of the efficacy of a dentifrice containing 1.5% arginine and 1450 ppm fluoride to a dentifrice containing 1450 ppm fluoride alone in the management of early coronal caries as assessed using Quantitative Light-induced Fluorescence
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Diane Cummins, C. Chuensuwonkul, Roger Ellwood, W. Yin, Patcharawan Srisilapanan, Luis R Mateo, Yun Po Zhang, and Narumanas Korwanich
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Male ,Adolescent ,Light ,Arginine ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Dentistry ,Sodium monofluorophosphate ,Dental Caries ,Calcium ,Fluorescence ,Calcium Carbonate ,Phosphates ,Arrest ,Fluorides ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Double-Blind Method ,Caries ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Photography ,Dentifrice ,Humans ,Medicine ,Child ,Dental Enamel ,General Dentistry ,Dentifrices ,Anterior teeth ,Enamel paint ,Dentistry(all) ,business.industry ,Cariostatic Agents ,Reversal ,Treatment Outcome ,chemistry ,Enamel ,Tooth Remineralization ,visual_art ,Coronal plane ,Lesions ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Female ,business ,Fluoride ,Coronal ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Objective To compare the efficacy of a new dentifrice containing 1.5% arginine, an insoluble calcium compound, and 1450 ppm fluoride to a matched, positive control dentifrice containing 1450 ppm fluoride in arresting and reversing early coronal caries lesions in children using Quantitative Light-induced Fluorescence (QLF). Study design 331 children from Chiang Mai, Thailand, aged 7–14 years, with one or more visible early enamel caries lesions on the upper anterior teeth, completed the study. The new dentifrice contained 1.5% arginine, an insoluble calcium compound, and 1450 ppm fluoride, as sodium monofluorophosphate; the matched positive control contained 1450 ppm fluoride only. Subjects brushed twice daily at home and additionally once on school days under teacher's supervision. Digital images of the upper six anterior teeth were captured at the baseline, 3- and 6-month examinations using a custom apparatus for reproducible acquisition of Quantitative Light-induced Fluorescence data. Results At the 3-month examination, the Δ Q (representing lesion volume) for the test group decreased from a mean of 28.62 at baseline to 20.53 mm 2 % and for the positive control group to 23.38 mm 2 %. The difference between groups was not statistically significant ( p = 0.055). At the 6-month examination, the Δ Q decreased for the test group to 15.85 mm 2 % and for the positive control group to 20.35 mm 2 %. The difference between groups was statistically significant ( p Conclusion A new dentifrice containing 1.5% arginine, an insoluble calcium compound, and 1450 ppm fluoride, as sodium monofluorophosphate, provided statistically significant superior efficacy in arresting and reversing active coronal caries lesions in children than brushing with a matched positive control dentifrice containing fluoride alone.
- Published
- 2013
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18. Contents Vol. 47, 2013
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Nadine Schlueter, Y.-P. Zhang, Satz Mengensatzproduktion, Jan L Ruben, Heejin Kim, RP Shellis, William DeVizio, A. Jesani, Marie-Charlotte D.N.J.M. Huysmans, Elmar Hellwig, Roger Ellwood, Druck Reinhardt Druck Basel, Pamela Hasslöf, Michele E Barbour, K.-Y. Song, Sebastian Paris, Majid Akbari, Carolina Ganss, Joachim Klimek, Christina Stecksén-Blicks, Petcharat Kraivaphan, H.H. Zarch, F. Karlsson Videhult, Aurea Simon-Soro, H. Meyer-Lueckel, Christof E. Dörfer, N. Zwier, Falko Goetz, Raúl Cabrera-Rubio, Pedro Belda-Ferre, Triratana T, G.J. Truin, Ewald M. Bronkhorst, J.-G. Jeon, F. Movagharipour, S. Pandit, Alex Mira, Falk Schwendicke, D. H. J. Jager, Cholticha Amornchat, Luis David Alcaraz, C. Brandelius, Farzaneh Ahrari, D. Cummins, Luis R Mateo, Christina E. West, and Adrian Lussi
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General Dentistry - Published
- 2013
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19. Two-Year Caries Clinical Study of the Efficacy of Novel Dentifrices Containing 1.5% Arginine, an Insoluble Calcium Compound and 1,450 ppm Fluoride
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Cholticha Amornchat, Triratana T, Roger Ellwood, William DeVizio, D. Cummins, Petcharat Kraivaphan, Y.-P. Zhang, and Luis R Mateo
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Male ,Arginine ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Treatment outcome ,Dentistry ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Dental Caries ,Calcium ,Calcium Carbonate ,Phosphates ,Clinical study ,Fluorides ,Tooth Loss ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Double-Blind Method ,Dentifrice ,Humans ,Medicine ,Tooth, Deciduous ,Child ,Dental Restoration, Permanent ,General Dentistry ,Dentifrices ,DMF Index ,business.industry ,Follow up studies ,Cariostatic Agents ,Treatment Outcome ,chemistry ,Sodium Fluoride ,Female ,business ,Fluoride ,Dental restoration ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
A 2-year double-blind randomized three-treatment controlled parallel-group clinical study compared the anti-caries efficacy of two dentifrices containing 1.5% arginine, an insoluble calcium compound (di-calcium phosphate or calcium carbonate) and 1,450 ppm fluoride (F), as sodium monofluorophosphate, to a control dentifrice containing 1,450 ppm F, as sodium fluoride, in a silica base. The 6,000 participants were from Bangkok, Thailand and aged 6-12 years initially. They were instructed to brush twice daily, in the morning and evening, with their randomly assigned dentifrice. Three trained and calibrated dentists examined the children at baseline and after 1 and 2 years using the National Institute of Dental Research Diagnostic Procedures and Criteria. The number of decayed, missing and filled teeth (DMFT) and surfaces (DMFS) for the three study groups were very similar at baseline, with no statistically significant differences among groups. After 1 year, there were no statistically significant differences in caries increments among the three groups. After 2 years, the two groups using the dentifrices containing 1.5% arginine, an insoluble calcium compound and 1,450 ppm F had statistically significantly (p < 0.02) lower DMFT increments (21.0 and 17.7% reductions, respectively) and DMFS increments (16.5 and 16.5%) compared to the control dentifrice. The differences between the two groups using the new dentifrices were not statistically significant. The results of this pivotal clinical study support the conclusion that dentifrices containing 1.5% arginine, an insoluble calcium compound and 1,450 ppm F provide significantly greater protection against caries lesion cavitation, in a low to moderate caries risk population, than dentifrices containing 1,450 ppm F alone.
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- 2013
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20. Right of reply: A proud contribution
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Roger Ellwood and W. DeVizio
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Male ,business.industry ,Dentistry ,030206 dentistry ,Arginine ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Ethics, Dental ,Medicine ,Humans ,Female ,030212 general & internal medicine ,business ,General Dentistry ,Classics ,Toothpastes - Published
- 2016
21. Water Fluoridation as a Public Health Measure
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Iain A. Pretty, Michael G McGrady, and Roger Ellwood
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Public health ,Evidence-Based Dentistry ,History, 20th Century ,United Kingdom ,Fluoridation ,Environmental health ,medicine ,Humans ,Public Health ,Water fluoridation ,business ,General Dentistry ,Dental public health ,Environmental planning - Abstract
Water fluoridation schemes have been used as dental public health measures for over 50 years. This second paper in a series of three aims to provide a background to the history of water fluoridation schemes and the evidence base that led to their implementation. The article will also discuss the processes and chemicals involved in fluoridation during water treatment.This article aims to provide a summary for general practitioners of the history and evidence base for water fluoridation, to enable them to understand the role of water fluoridation in caries prevention and to be able to answer non-clinical questions raised by patients.
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- 2010
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22. A digital subtraction radiography investigation of upper first molar proximal bone density changes in adolescents
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Shirley Alexander, Keith Horner, Robin M Davies, and Roger Ellwood
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Molar ,Adolescent ,Bone density ,Dentition ,business.industry ,Radiography ,Alveolar Bone Loss ,Subtraction ,Reproducibility of Results ,Dentistry ,Radiography, Dental, Digital ,Mandibular first molar ,Clinical attachment loss ,Bone Density ,Subtraction Technique ,Periodontal Attachment Loss ,Maxilla ,Humans ,Periodontal Pocket ,Periodontics ,Medicine ,business ,Digital radiography - Abstract
The aim of this in vivo study was to investigate the ability of digital subtraction radiography to monitor changes in proximal bone density, adjacent to the upper first molars, in a group of adolescents using the Digora direct digital radiographic system to acquire images. For 57 adolescents, assessments of changes in probing attachment level at the mesio- and disto-buccal surfaces of both upper first molars and proximal crestal bone density using digital subtraction radiography were made. At the conclusion of this 21-month study attachment loss was identified in 34 (17%) of the 204 sites analysed. For sites with attachment loss a mean decrease in bone density equivalent to 5.51 mm 3 aluminium (Al) was found compared to 2.96 mm 3 Al for those without (p < 0.001). For the 17 subjects with attachment loss a mean equivalent to 4.66 mm 3 Al was lost from the crestal bone compared with 2.56 mm 3 Al for the 40 subjects without attachment loss (p
- Published
- 2010
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23. Quantitative stain detection in vivo using fluorescent imaging
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Naveen Mohan, Roger Ellwood, Iain A. Pretty, and Andrew M. Taylor
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Adult ,Adolescent ,Light ,Dentistry ,Image processing ,Biology ,Fluorescent imaging ,Stain ,Fluorescence ,Young Adult ,Anti-Infective Agents ,In vivo ,Mouth rinse ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Humans ,Dental Enamel ,General Dentistry ,Aged ,Extramural ,business.industry ,Chlorhexidine ,Middle Aged ,Current analysis ,Photography, Dental ,Subtraction Technique ,Tooth Discoloration ,business ,Algorithms ,Tooth stain ,Biomedical engineering - Abstract
Quantitative Light-induced Fluorescence (QLF) has been used to measure tooth stain in vitro; however the current analysis method cannot be used in vivo, as it requires regions of interest to be surrounded by unstained tissue. In this study, an algorithm was developed to detect stain on QLF images of teeth captured in vivo. It uses convex hulls to reconstruct an image of the tooth, without stain, based on clean areas of the image, and subtracts the captured image from the reconstruction to find areas darkened by stain. A tooth outline (mask) must be provided to guide the reconstruction. Three versions of the algorithm are tested on images taken during a stain development study, using a range of values for the threshold parameter. The stain employed was produced using Chlorhexidine mouth rinse. The software output correlates well with manual scoring (Pearson's>0.7; p
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- 2009
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24. Comparative investigations of the desensitising efficacy of a new dentifrice
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J. Sowinski, Roger Ellwood, R M Davies, M. Petrone, Anthony R Volpe, Farid Ayad, and William DeVizio
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business.industry ,Chemistry ,Dentifrice ,Periodontics ,Dentistry ,business - Published
- 2008
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25. Different Brain Responses to Pain and Its Expectation in the Dental Chair
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Roger Ellwood, Neville J. McDonald, L. Khatib, Xiao-Su Hu, P. Bauer, Alexandre F. DaSilva, A.J. Racek, Thiago D. Nascimento, Daniel J. Chiego, G.R. Holland, and M.C. Bender
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Male ,Pain Threshold ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Haemodynamic response ,Emotions ,Dentistry ,Hemodynamics ,Prefrontal Cortex ,Stimulation ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Audiology ,Somatosensory system ,Percussion ,Cognition ,stomatognathic system ,Threshold of pain ,Dental Anxiety ,medicine ,Humans ,Prefrontal cortex ,General Dentistry ,Evoked Potentials ,Pain Measurement ,Spectroscopy, Near-Infrared ,business.industry ,Brain ,Pain Perception ,Research Reports ,Somatosensory Cortex ,Dentin Sensitivity ,Cold Temperature ,stomatognathic diseases ,Sensory Thresholds ,Functional near-infrared spectroscopy ,Female ,business ,Attitude to Health - Abstract
A dental appointment commonly prompts fear of a painful experience, yet we have never fully understood how our brains react to the expectation of imminent tooth pain once in a dental chair. In our study, 21 patients with hypersensitive teeth were tested using nonpainful and painful stimuli in a clinical setting. Subjects were tested in a dental chair using functional near-infrared spectroscopy to measure cortical activity during a stepwise cold stimulation of a hypersensitive tooth, as well as nonpainful control stimulation on the same tooth. Patients’ sensory-discriminative and emotional-cognitive cortical regions were studied through the transition of a neutral to a painful stimulation. In the putative somatosensory cortex contralateral to the stimulus, 2 well-defined hemodynamic peaks were detected in the homuncular orofacial region: the first peak during the nonpainful phase and a second peak after the pain threshold was reached. Moreover, in the upper-left and lower-right prefrontal cortices, there was a significant active hemodynamic response in only the first phase, before the pain. Subsequently, the same prefrontal cortical areas deactivated after a painful experience had been reached. Our study indicates for the first time that pain perception and expectation elicit different hemodynamic cortical responses in a dental clinical setting.
- Published
- 2015
26. The International Caries Classification and Management System (ICCMS™) An Example of a Caries Management Pathway
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Amid I, Ismail, Nigel B, Pitts, Marisol, Tellez, Avijit, Banerjee, Christopher, Deery, Gail, Douglas, Hafstein, Eggertsson, Kim, Ekstrand, Roger, Ellwood, Juliana, Gomez, Anahita, Jablonski-Momeni, Justine, Kolker, Christopher, Longbottom, David, Manton, Stefania, Martignon, Michael, McGrady, Peter, Rechmann, David, Ricketts, Woosung, Sohn, Van, Thompson, Svante, Twetman, Robert, Weyant, Mark, Wolff, and Andrea, Zandona
- Subjects
Tooth Surface ,health care facilities, manpower, and services ,education ,MEDLINE ,Dentistry ,Dental Caries ,Pruebas de actividad de caries dental ,Caries management ,Humans ,Medicine ,General Dentistry ,health care economics and organizations ,Extensive caries ,business.industry ,Dentistry(all) ,Caries dentales ,Initial caries ,International Agencies ,Enfermedades dentales ,Caries Lesion ,Proceedings ,Risk analysis (engineering) ,Management system ,Workforce ,Natural tooth ,Early childhood caries ,business ,Risk assessment - Abstract
The International Caries Classification and Management System (ICCMS™) is a comprehensive set of clinical protocols that address all diagnostic, preventive and restorative decisions necessary “to preserve tooth structure and restore only when indicated,” which is the mission adopted at the Temple University Caries Management Pathways workshop, in 2012 [1]. The foundation for ICCMS™ is based on extensive critical analyses, research, and clinical feedback on the best approaches to move away from the mechanical or restorative care that has been followed around the world, towards a system where prevention is emphasized, initial caries lesions are prevented from progressing (controlled), and moderate or extensive caries lesions are restored with the goal of preserving, as much as possible, natural tooth structure [2]. This chapter will describe the scientific, and clinical management protocols that have been developed over the last several years by over 70 cariologists, epidemiologists, and clinicians. While ICCMS™ is recommended as the most comprehensive pathway for caries management to achieve the desired aforementioned mission, it is important to emphasize that ICCMS™ is not the only system available today that promotes staging of the caries process and risk assessment and management [1]. The ICCMS™, in contrast to other systems, has well-developed and documented protocols for the implementation of a new model of caries management. It is based on the well-established and widely used International Caries Detection and Assessment System (ICDAS™).
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- 2015
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27. Vital Tooth Bleaching in Dental Practice: 3. Biological, Dental and Legal Issues
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Robin M Davies, Iain A. Pretty, Roger Ellwood, Paul A. Brunton, and Amin Aminian
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Dental practice ,Legal position ,Medical device ,business.industry ,Dental Bonding ,Dentistry ,Legislation ,Cosmetic Techniques ,Hydrogen Peroxide ,Dentin Sensitivity ,Oxidants ,Directive ,Dental Amalgam ,United Kingdom ,Consumer Product Safety ,Glass Ionomer Cements ,Law ,Gingival Diseases ,Tooth Bleaching ,Vital Tooth ,Humans ,Medicine ,Dental Enamel ,business ,General Dentistry - Abstract
The final section of this series examines both the evidence for the safety of external bleaching with hydrogen peroxide and related products and the legal position in the UK with regard to their sale and use in general dental practice. Potential side-effects are examined, including biological effects and dental effects, with a review of the current evidence. The EU Cosmetics and Medical Device Directive are both described and their impact on the provision of tooth bleaching in the UK is explained. The legal position in the UK renders the sale and supply of solutions containing0.1% peroxide illegal, and practitioners must be aware of the underlying legislation and the basis upon which a prosecution may be pursued.Clinicians considering using hydrogen peroxide products must be aware of the safety issues surrounding their use and be able to explain to patients the nature of the risk and also the likelihood of any given patient experiencing them.
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- 2006
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28. The distribution ofTannerella forsythiain an adolescent and adult population
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Mary P. Cullinan, Stephen Hamlet, Robin M Davies, Philip S. Bird, Roger Ellwood, D. Narayanan, and Gregory J. Seymour
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Population ,Dental Plaque ,Adult population ,Physiology ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Microbiology ,law.invention ,Sex Factors ,Forsythia ,Species Specificity ,Disease severity ,law ,RNA, Ribosomal, 16S ,Bacteroides ,Humans ,Periodontal Pocket ,Tannerella forsythia ,Child ,education ,Polymerase chain reaction ,Aged ,education.field_of_study ,biology ,Smoking ,Age Factors ,Prevotella intermedia ,Middle Aged ,biology.organism_classification ,16S ribosomal RNA ,stomatognathic diseases ,Periodontics ,Female ,Polymorphism, Restriction Fragment Length - Abstract
Background: The fact that Tannerella forsythia, an important periopathogen, is difficult to cultivate from mixed infections has impeded precise estimates of its distribution within a given population. In order to discern T. forsythia alone from the mixed infection of plaque, the use of sensitive 16S ribosomal RNA based polymerase chain reaction (PCR) detection is necessary. Objectives: The aim of the present study was to determine the distribution of T. forsythia in an adult and in an adolescent population. Materials and methods: Subgingival plaque samples were obtained from 498 Australian adults and from 228 adolescent subjects from Manchester, UK. Tannerella forsythia was detected using PCR and confirmed by restriction analysis. Semi-quantitation of the organisms was carried out using two specific primers of differing sensitivities. Results: In the adolescent population, 25% were found to carry T. forsythia, albeit in relatively low numbers. In the adult population, a total of 37.8% and 11% were found to carry the organism with primer 2 and primer 1, respectively, suggesting that around 27% had between 10(3) and 10(7) organisms. Although there was an apparent increased proportion of T. forsythia positive subjects in those aged >= 50 years, this was not statistical significant. However, T. forsythia positive male smokers showed increased disease severity compared with T. forsythia negative subjects. Conclusion: This study has shown that at least 25% of the adolescent population carry low numbers of T. forsythia, whereas at least 37% of adults carry the organism, with some 11% having relatively high numbers. The relationship between T. forsythia and disease progression in these populations, however, remains to be determined.
- Published
- 2005
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29. 61st Annual ORCA Congress 2014
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Ewald M. Bronkhorst, S. Pandit, Petcharat Kraivaphan, Joachim Klimek, Falko Goetz, Raúl Cabrera-Rubio, Farzaneh Ahrari, Jan L Ruben, Nadine Schlueter, Michele E Barbour, F. Movagharipour, Majid Akbari, H.H. Zarch, Carolina Ganss, A. Jesani, D. Cummins, Aurea Simon-Soro, Satz Mengensatzproduktion, Sebastian Paris, Pamela Hasslöf, Luis R Mateo, Heejin Kim, Pedro Belda-Ferre, RP Shellis, D. H. J. Jager, William DeVizio, J.-G. Jeon, Roger Ellwood, Druck Reinhardt Druck Basel, G.J. Truin, F. Karlsson Videhult, K.-Y. Song, Triratana T, Falk Schwendicke, Cholticha Amornchat, Luis David Alcaraz, Christina E. West, C. Brandelius, N. Zwier, Adrian Lussi, H. Meyer-Lueckel, Y.-P. Zhang, Elmar Hellwig, Marie-Charlotte D.N.J.M. Huysmans, Christof E. Dörfer, Christina Stecksén-Blicks, and Alex Mira
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Pregnancy ,business.industry ,Immunology ,medicine ,Congenital cytomegalovirus infection ,medicine.disease ,business ,General Dentistry - Published
- 2013
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30. Relationship between area deprivation and the anticaries benefit of an oral health programme providing free fluoride toothpaste to young children
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Helen V Worthington, Anthony S. Blinkhorn, G M Davies, Roger Ellwood, R M Davies, and G. O. Taylor
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business.product_category ,Psychological intervention ,Dentistry ,Dental Caries ,law.invention ,Fluorides ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Poverty Areas ,Fluoride toothpaste ,Humans ,Medicine ,Single-Blind Method ,Child ,Poverty ,General Dentistry ,Toothpaste ,DMF Index ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Cariostatic Agents ,Clinical trial ,England ,Quartile ,Child, Preschool ,Health Education, Dental ,Health education ,Toothbrush ,business ,Toothpastes ,Program Evaluation ,Demography - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To determine the effectiveness of providing free toothpaste containing either 1450 or 440 ppm F on caries experience in 5-year-old children living in areas with different levels of material deprivation. DESIGN: Five-year, examiner-blind, randomized, controlled, parallel-group, clinical trial. Children were randomly assigned to three groups. SETTING: Health Districts in the north-west of England with high levels of dental caries. Clinical examinations were performed in schools during the period October 1999 to April 2000 when the children were 5-6 years old. PARTICIPANTS: Children from 3-month birth cohorts resident in nine, nonfluoridated health districts. INTERVENTIONS: Toothpaste containing either 440 or 1450 ppm F and dental health literature posted at 3-month intervals and toothbrush provided annually from the age of 1-5 years. Comparison group received no intervention. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Mean dmft and proportion of participants with dmft > 0, dmft > or = 4, upper primary incisor caries and extraction of one or more primary teeth. Outcomes tabulated for quartiles of participants based on the distribution of the Townsend index of material deprivation. RESULTS: A total of 3467 children were included in the final data analysis. The Townsend index was found to be useful in identifying groups of children with increased caries risk. Overall, participants in the programme using the high-fluoride toothpaste had significantly (P < 0.002) less caries than the comparison group with similar absolute reductions in mean dmft for the most- and least-deprived groups. Relative to the comparison group the association between deprivation and dental caries was changed so that in the most-deprived quartile those using the low-fluoride toothpaste tended to have less dental caries than the comparison group whereas in the least deprived they tended to have more. This difference in the association (slope) was statistically significant (P < 0.05). Provision of both low- and high-fluoride toothpaste appeared to reduce the risk of extractions for participants in the most-deprived quartile (P < 0.05). CONCLUSION: The relative benefits of the programmes supplying the two toothpastes considered in this study are different depending on the deprivation status of the participants. For the most-deprived groups postal provision of either a low- or high-fluoride toothpaste provides similar levels of benefit. In the less deprived groups only provision of the high-fluoride toothpaste provided a benefit. The absolute caries reduction seen for provision of the high-fluoride toothpaste was not related to the deprivation status and hence the programme did not reduce deprivation-related health inequalities. Targeting the programme using the methods employed in this study is unlikely to improve the effectiveness of the programme. Copyright Blackwell Munksgaard, 2004
- Published
- 2004
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31. Prevention. Part 4: Toothbrushing: What advice should be given to patients?
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Roger Ellwood, G M Davies, R M Davies, and Elizabeth Kay
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Adult ,Toothbrushing ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Adolescent ,Dental Plaque ,Mouthwashes ,MEDLINE ,Dentistry ,Dental Caries ,Preventive care ,Fluorides ,Strength of evidence ,Patient Education as Topic ,Fluoride toothpaste ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,General Dentistry ,Periodontal Diseases ,Dentist-Patient Relations ,business.industry ,Age Factors ,Health behaviour ,Infant ,Equipment Design ,Cariostatic Agents ,Systematic review ,Child, Preschool ,Family medicine ,Scale (social sciences) ,Meta-analysis ,business ,Toothpastes - Abstract
Prevention This paper examines and summarises the evidence to support the advice that GDPs should give their patients on toothbrushing. The strength of evidence is graded using a five-point hierarchical scale. Much of the evidence to support toothbrushing advice is relatively weak but the increasing number of high quality systematic reviews will gradually improve the strength of evidence to support effective programmes of preventive care. Clinicians can play an important role in maximising the benefits of toothbrushing with fluoride toothpaste for patients of all ages. This well-accepted health behaviour can, if implemented correctly, reduce the establishment and advance of the two major dental diseases.
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- 2003
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32. An in vitro Comparison of a Combined FOTI/Visual Examination of Occlusal Caries with Other Caries Diagnostic Methods and the Effect of Stain on Their Diagnostic Performance
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Kim R. Ekstrand, D.F. Côrtes, and Roger Ellwood
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Molar ,Diagnostic methods ,Dentistry ,Dental Caries ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Stain ,Fluorescence ,stomatognathic system ,Dental Caries Activity Tests ,Electric Impedance ,Fiber Optic Technology ,Humans ,Medicine ,Dental Enamel ,General Dentistry ,Observer Variation ,Receiver operating characteristic ,Enamel paint ,business.industry ,Electrodiagnosis ,Visual examination ,Reproducibility of Results ,Occlusal caries ,ROC Curve ,Area Under Curve ,visual_art ,Dentin ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Tooth Discoloration ,business - Abstract
The aims of this in vitro study were to compare the combination of FOTI and visual inspection to other diagnostic methods for the detection and evaluation of the depth of occlusal caries and assess the effect of stain on diagnostic performance. Five diagnostic methods (combined FOTI/Visual (CFV), Visual, FOTI, DIAGNOdent and Electrical Caries Monitor) were considered. Histological validation was performed in the 152 occlusal molar sites (111 teeth) using 350-µm sections and a stereomicroscope. The rank correlation coefficients with histology ranged from 0.42 (DIAGNOdent) to 0.66 (CFV). The area under the ROC curves (AUC) for enamel lesions ranged from 0.82 (ECM) to 0.88 (CFV) and from 0.81 (DIAGNOdent) to 0.91 (CFV) for dentine lesions. The AUC at the dentine level for CFV and FOTI were similar (p > 0.05), but the AUC for CFV was significantly greater than for visual (p < 0.001), DIAGNOdent (p = 0.005) and the ECM (p = 0.04). FOTI was found to be particularly useful for the detection of dentine lesions. The exclusion of stain and brown spot lesions improved performance for all methods. It is concluded that CFV is useful for the determination of occlusal lesion depth and that in the presence of stain and brown spot lesions different cut-off points may be required for the ECM and DIAGNOdent to identify dentine lesions.
- Published
- 2003
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33. Non-cavitated carious lesions detection methods: A systematic review
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Roger Ellwood, Juliana Gomez, Amid I. Ismail, Iain A. Pretty, and Marisol Tellez
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Cochrane collaboration ,Receiver operating characteristic ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,MEDLINE ,Dentistry ,Reproducibility of Results ,Transillumination ,Gold standard (test) ,Dental Caries ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Quality of evidence ,Caries lesion ,Detection ,Sensitivity ,Caries ,Specificity ,Medicine ,Dental Caries Activity Tests ,Humans ,business ,General Dentistry ,Noncavitated carious lesions ,Accuracy ,Visual methods - Abstract
The aim of this study was to critically appraise the performance of detection methods for non-cavitated carious lesions (NCCLs). A detailed search of Medline (via OVID), the Cochrane Collaboration, Scielo and EMBASE identified 2054 publications. After title and abstract review by three investigators (JG, MT, AI), 124 publications were selected for further review. The final publications evaluated the following methods: Visual (V), Caries Lesion Activity Assessment (CLAA), Laser Fluorescence (LF), Radiographic (R), Fibre-optic Transillumination (FOTI), Electrical Conductance (EC) and Quantitative Light-induced Fluorescence (QLF). All included studies used histological assessment as a gold standard for in vitro studies or clinical/visual validation for the in vivo designs. They reported outcomes measures such as sensitivity (SE), specificity (SP), area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC) and reliability. Data were extracted from the selected studies independently by two reviewers and checked for errors. The quality of the studies was evaluated as described by Bader et al. (2002). Of the 124 articles, 42 were included that described 85 clinical assessments. Overall, the quality of evidence on detection methods was rated ‘poor’, except for EC that was rated ‘fair’. The SE rates were as follows: V (0.17–0.96), LF or DIAGNOdent (DD) (0.16–0.96), R (0.12–0.84), FOTI (0.21–0.96), EC (0.61–0.92) and QLF (0.82). The SP rates were as follows: V (0.46–1.0), LF (0.25–1.00), R (0.55–0.99), FOTI (0.74-0.88), EC (0.73–1.0) and QLF (0.92). There is a large variation in SE and SP values for methods and a lack of consistency in definition of disease and analytical methods. EC and QLF seem to be promising for detection of early lesions. For both cost and practicality considerations, visual methods should remain the standard for clinical assessment in dental practice.
- Published
- 2014
34. High-fluoride toothpaste: a multicenter randomized controlled trial in adults
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Frauke Müller, Michael Warncke, Martine Riesen, Michael J. Wicht, Alexander Ilgner, Michael J. Noack, Murali Srinivasan, Martin Schimmel, Ina Nitschke, Roger Ellwood, and University of Zurich
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Adult ,Male ,business.product_category ,Adolescent ,Test group ,Surface Properties ,Statistical difference ,Dentistry ,610 Medicine & health ,Toothpastes/administration & dosage ,Dental Caries ,law.invention ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Hardness ,Germany ,Dentifrice ,Medicine ,Humans ,Fluorides, Topical ,Single-Blind Method ,General Dentistry ,Root caries ,Aged ,ddc:618 ,Toothpaste ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,10223 Clinic for Masticatory Disorders ,Fluorides, Topical/administration & dosage ,2739 Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,High fluoride ,Middle Aged ,3500 General Dentistry ,ddc:617.6 ,Cariostatic Agents ,Cariostatic Agents/administration & dosage ,Sodium Fluoride/administration & dosage ,Sodium Fluoride ,Female ,Analysis of variance ,Dental Caries/prevention & control ,business ,Toothpastes - Abstract
Objective The aim of this single - blind, multicenter, parallel, randomized controlled trial was to evaluate the effectiveness of the application of a high-fluoride toothpaste on root caries in adults. Methods Adult patients (n = 130, ♂ = 74, ♀ = 56; mean age ± SD: 56.9 ± 12.9) from three participating centers, diagnosed with root caries, were randomly allocated into two groups: Test (n = 64, ♂ = 37, ♀ = 27; lesions = 144; mean age: 59.0 ± 12.1; intervention: high-fluoride toothpaste with 5000 ppm F), and Control (n = 66, ♂ = 37, ♀ = 29; lesions = 160; mean age: 54.8 ± 13.5; intervention: regular-fluoride toothpaste with 1350 ppm F) groups. Clinical examinations and surface hardness scoring of the carious lesions were performed for each subject at specified time intervals (T0 - at baseline before intervention, T1 - at 3 months and T2 - at 6 months after intervention). Mean surface hardness scores (HS) were calculated for each patient. Statistical analyses comprised of two-way analysis of variance and post hoc comparisons using the Bonferroni-Dunn correction. Results At T0 , there was no statistical difference between the two groups with regard to gender (P = 0.0682, unpaired t-test), or age (P = 0.9786, chi-squared test), and for the overall HS (Test group: HS = 3.4 ± 0.61; Control group HS = 3.4 ± 0.66; P = 0.8757, unpaired t-test). The anova revealed significantly better HS for the test group than for the control groups (T1 : Test group: HS = 2.9 ± 0.67; Control group HS = 3.1 ± 0.75; T2 : Test group: HS = 2.4 ± 0.81; Control group HS = 2.8 ± 0.79; P Conclusions The application of a high-fluoride containing dentifrice (5000 ppm F) in adults, twice daily, significantly improves the surface hardness of otherwise untreated root caries lesions when compared with the use of regular fluoride containing (1350 ppm F) toothpastes.
- Published
- 2014
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35. Comparative investigations of the desensitising efficacy of a new dentifrice
- Author
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M. Petrone, Anthony R Volpe, Roger Ellwood, J. Sowinski, R M Davies, Farid Ayad, and William DeVizio
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Potassium Compounds ,Dentine hypersensitivity ,Potassium ,Statistics as Topic ,Dentistry ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Sensodyne ,Phosphates ,Potassium Chloride ,Fluorides ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Fluoride dentifrice ,Sodium fluoride ,Confidence Intervals ,Pressure ,Dentifrice ,Humans ,Medicine ,Tooth Root ,Dentifrices ,Aged ,Nitrates ,business.industry ,Air ,Dentin Sensitivity ,Middle Aged ,Cariostatic Agents ,Drug Combinations ,Treatment Outcome ,chemistry ,Touch ,Tin Fluorides ,Sodium Fluoride ,Periodontics ,Female ,Air blast ,business ,Fluoride ,Toothpastes ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Objectives: In two clinical trials of 8 weeks duration, the ability of a new dentifrice, containing potassium nitrate, stannous fluoride and sodium fluoride to reduce dentine hypersensitivity was compared with either a non-desensitising fluoride dentifrice or a commercially available desensitising dentifrice (Sensodyne F) to reduce dentine hypersensitivity. Method: In both studies, the participants had to have at least two sensitive root surfaces. Subjects were stratified by baseline tactile and air blast sensitivity scores and the number of sensitive teeth and randomly allocated to 2 balanced groups. In the first study (N=81) the new dentifrice was compared with a fluoride dentifrice and in the second study (N=105) with Sensodyne F. Participants were requested to brush with their assigned dentifrice twice a day for one minute. At 4 and 8 weeks the sensitive teeth were again examined and their tactile and air blast sensitivity scores recorded. Results: In study 1, the group using the new dentifrice tolerated greater pressure after 4 (34.9 g) and 8 weeks (38.4 g) than the group using the fluoride dentifrice (22.9 g and 19.0 g, respectively). These differences were statistically significant (p
- Published
- 2001
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36. Reversal of Primary Root Caries Using Dentifrices Containing 5,000 and 1,100 ppm Fluoride
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Edward Lynch, Lars G. Petersson, Aylin Baysan, Roger Ellwood, P. Borsboom, and R M Davies
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Adult ,Time Factors ,Plaque index ,Dentistry ,Fluorides ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Animal science ,Double-Blind Method ,Statistical analyses ,Sodium fluoride ,Dentifrice ,Dental Caries Activity Tests ,Humans ,Medicine ,General Dentistry ,Dentifrices ,Root caries ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,business.industry ,Dental Plaque Index ,Reproducibility of Results ,Middle Aged ,Dose–response relationship ,chemistry ,Root Caries ,Tooth Remineralization ,business ,Fluoride ,Gingival margin - Abstract
This study compared the ability of two sodium fluoride dentifrices, one containing 5,000 ppm fluoride (Prevident 5000 Plus) and the other 1,100 ppm fluoride (Winterfresh Gel), to reverse primary root caries lesions (PRCLs). A total of 201 subjects with at least one PRCL each entered the study and were randomly allocated to use one of the dentifrices. After 6 months, 186 subjects were included in statistical analyses. At baseline and after 3 and 6 months, the lesions were clinically assessed and their electrical resistance measured using an electrical caries monitor. After 3 months, 39 (38.2%) of the 102 subjects in the 5,000 ppm F– group and 9 (10.7%) of 84 subjects using the 1,100 ppm F– dentifrice, had one or more PRCLs which had hardened (p = 0.005). Between baseline and 3 months, the log10 mean ± SD resistance values of lesions for subjects in the 1,100 ppm F– group had decreased by 0.06±0.55, whereas those in the 5,000 ppm F– group had increased by 0.40±0.64 (p– group and 24 (28.6%) in the 1,100 ppm F– group had one or more PRCLs that had become hard (p = 0.002). Between baseline and 6 months, the log10 mean ± SD resistance values of lesions for subjects in the 1,100 ppm F– group decreased by 0.004±0.70, whereas in the 5,000 ppm F– group, they increased by 0.56±0.76 (p– group when compared with the 1,100 ppm F– group. The plaque index in the 5,000 ppm F– group was also significantly reduced when compared with the 1,100 ppm F– group. The colour of the lesions remained unchanged. It was concluded that the dentifrice containing 5,000 ppm F– was significantly better at remineralising PRCLs than the one containing 1,100 ppm F–.
- Published
- 2000
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37. Dental fluorosis in permanent incisor teeth in relation to water fluoridation, social deprivation and toothpaste use in infancy
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Andrew Rugg-Gunn, E D Tabari, D J Evans, Roger Ellwood, and R M Davies
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business.product_category ,Fluorosis, Dental ,Dentistry ,Fluorides ,Incisor ,Fluoridation ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,medicine ,Maxilla ,Odds Ratio ,Photography ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Maxillary central incisor ,Water fluoridation ,Child ,Poverty ,General Dentistry ,Toothpaste ,Dentition ,business.industry ,Infant ,Reproducibility of Results ,Odds ratio ,medicine.disease ,Dentition, Permanent ,Social deprivation ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,England ,Social Class ,Multivariate Analysis ,business ,Dental fluorosis ,Toothpastes - Abstract
Objectives To determine the prevalence and severity of fluorosis in permanent incisor teeth in young children in a fluoridated and a fluoride-deficient community and to establish what relationship, if any, there was between the occurrence of dental fluorosis and the reported use of fluoride toothpaste in childhood. Design A prevalence study of children aged 8–9 years who had been continuous residents in fluoridated Newcastle or fluoride-deficient Northumberland. Method The permanent maxillary central incisor teeth were examined clinically and photographically by one examiner using the Thylstrup-Fejerskov index; the photographs were read blind to child identity and clinical score. A closed-response questionnaire enquired into the child's early experiences of toothbrushing and use of fluoride toothpastes. Social deprivation was measured by a Jarman score. The study took place in 1998. Outcome measure Prevalence of dental fluorosis measured by the Thylstrup–Fejerskov index. Results Complete data were available for 78% (n = 409) and 79% (n = 403) of eligible sampled children in the two areas, respectively. Clinical and photographic results agreed closely and had high reproducibility. The prevalence of fluorosis was 54% in the fluoridated area and 23% in the fluoride-deficient area when all grades (> 0) of fluorosis were included; percentage prevalence of mild to moderate fluorosis (≥ 3) was 3% and 0.5% in the two areas, respectively. Multivariate analysis indicated that area of residence (odds ratio = 4.5), Jarman score (odds ratio = 0.99 per Jarman unit) and type of toothpaste (odds ratio = 1.6) were statistically significantly related to presence or absence of fluorosis: the risk factors were — fluoridated area, affluence, and use of adult toothpaste. Conclusions and recommendations The prevalence of aesthetically important dental fluorosis was low, although higher in the fluoridated area. Use of a child's toothpaste (with lower fluoride concentration) could decrease risk in a fluoridated area. Adherence to the guidelines published by the British Society of Paediatric Dentistry is recommended.
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- 2000
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38. An in vitro Comparison of the Ability of Fibre–Optic Transillumination, Visual Inspection and Radiographs to Detect Occlusal Caries and Evaluate Lesion Depth
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Roger Ellwood, D.F. Côrtes, Kim R. Ekstrand, and A.R. Elias-Boneta
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Observer Variation ,genetic structures ,business.industry ,Radiography ,Reproducibility of Results ,Dentistry ,Occlusal caries ,Microtomy ,Transillumination ,Dental Caries ,Lesion depth ,Molar ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,eye diseases ,Visual inspection ,ROC Curve ,Dentin ,Fiber Optic Technology ,Humans ,Medicine ,Dental Enamel ,business ,Radiography, Bitewing ,General Dentistry - Abstract
The aim of this study was to compare the performance of fibre–optic transillumination (FOTI), visual inspection and bite–wing radiographs to detect occlusal caries and estimate the lesion depth. Fifty–nine extracted molars were assessed using FOTI and visual examination by 4 trained examiners and 1 examiner evaluated the bite–wing radiographs. Histological validation was performed using 250–μm sections examined with a stereomicroscope. For the three methods, the correlation between the lesion depth and the histological scores varied from 0.65 to 0.73. For dentinal caries detection, the areas under ROC curves ranged from 0.83 to 0.87. The radiographic method was poor at detecting lesions confined to enamel. FOTI, visual inspection and radiographs showed a good correlation with the histology but had difficulty in distinguishing lesions located deep in enamel or in the outer third of dentine. FOTI was shown to be as accurate as a detailed visual inspection in detecting occlusal caries.
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- 2000
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39. Determination of the optimal conditions for dental subtraction radiography using a storage phosphor system
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David S Brettle, Roger Ellwood, and R M Davies
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Radiography ,Thyroid Gland ,Low contrast ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Humans ,Medicine ,Figure of merit ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,General Dentistry ,Single exposure ,Phantoms, Imaging ,business.industry ,Attenuation ,Subtraction ,Dose-Response Relationship, Radiation ,Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Radiography, Dental, Digital ,General Medicine ,Radiographic Image Enhancement ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Subtraction Technique ,Storage phosphor ,Artifacts ,business ,Nuclear medicine ,Aluminum - Abstract
To determine the optimal kVp and exposure conditions for digital subtraction radiography system using a storage phosphor system.Signal-to-noise (SNR) measurements were acquired using a Digora system (Soredex, Helsinki, Finland) of large area, low contrast, clinically realistic details against varying degrees of background attenuation for both single exposure unsubtracted and subtracted images. These results were combined with a measure of estimated thyroid dose to derive a figure of merit (FOM) for the unsubtracted and subtracted images.For both unsubtracted and subtraction radiography, an exposure at 50 kVp and 250 muGy produce the best overall FOM. However, using the system at the 60 kVp maximum a FOM at 1000 muGy for unsubtracted radiography and 500 muGy for subtraction radiography gave the best SNR performance.Operating parameters have been derived which allow the user to choose between optimising SNR and dose (50 kVp, 250 muGy for unsubtracted and subtracted radiography) or SNR alone (60 kVp, 1000 muGy for unsubtracted and 60 kVp, 500 muGy for subtracted), for the visualisation of clinically representative details using the Digora system.
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- 1999
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40. Effect of a triclosan/copolymer dentifrice on the incidence of periodontal attachment loss in adolescents
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Anthony R Volpe, Roger Ellwood, A. S B Blinkhorn, Helen V Worthington, and Robin M Davies
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Adolescent ,Test group ,India ,Dentistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Double-Blind Method ,Periodontal Attachment Loss ,Prevalence ,Dentifrice ,Humans ,Periodontal Pocket ,Medicine ,Dental Calculus ,Pakistan ,Child ,Adverse effect ,Poverty ,Dentifrices ,Bangladesh ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Significant difference ,Subgingival calculus ,Triclosan ,England ,Clinical attachment loss ,chemistry ,Anti-Infective Agents, Local ,Linear Models ,Periodontics ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
The aim of this study was to assess the effectiveness of a dentifrice containing 0.3% triclosan, 2.0% copolymer and 0.243% sodium fluoride (Colgate Total) in the prevention of periodontal attachment loss in adolescents. A 3-year, double-blind, randomised, controlled, clinical trial was conducted on 641 adolescents, initially aged 11-13 years. The participants were enrolled from schools in economically deprived areas of Manchester, England, which had a high % of Asian pupils originating from India, Pakistan and Bangladesh. After the baseline examination, which included assessments of pocket depth, attachment loss and subgingival calculus, the adolescents were randomly allocated to use either a triclosan/copolymer or control dentifrice. The control was identical to the test dentifrice with the exception that it did not contain triclosan/copolymer. Participants were re-examined after 18 and 36 months. After 3 years, a total of 239 adolescents remained in the test and 241 in the control group. The prevalence of attachment loss increased from 2% at baseline to 24% after 3 years. The mean increment of attachment loss during the study was 0.025 mm per site in the control group and 0.018 mm per site in the test group. A linear regression model showed a statistically significant difference in attachment loss between the test and control group, in adolescents with high mean pocket depths at baseline. No adverse effects attributable to the test or control dentifrices were observed during the study. This study has demonstrated that unsupervised use of a triclosan/copolymer dentifrice can significantly reduce periodontal attachment loss, particularly in adolescents with high mean pocket depths.
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- 1998
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41. Supragingival calculus and periodontal disease
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Margaret E Petrone, Roger Ellwood, R M Davies, and Anthony R Volpe
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Diphosphonates ,business.industry ,Calculus (dental) ,Zinc compounds ,Dentistry ,medicine.disease ,Diphosphates ,Periodontal disease ,Zinc Compounds ,Prevalence ,Dentifrice ,Humans ,Periodontics ,Medicine ,Dental Calculus ,Crystallization ,business ,Dentifrices ,Periodontal Diseases ,Toothpastes - Published
- 1997
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42. Prevalence of suspected periodontal pathogens identified using ELISA in adolescents of differing ethnic origins
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Stephen Hamlet, V. Clerehugh, Mary P. Cullinan, Roger Ellwood, Helen V Worthington, and R M Davies
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Molar ,Adolescent ,Cross-sectional study ,Bleeding on probing ,Dental Plaque ,Gingiva ,Black People ,India ,Dentistry ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans ,Prevotella intermedia ,White People ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,stomatognathic system ,Ethnicity ,Prevalence ,medicine ,Humans ,Periodontal Pocket ,Dental Calculus ,Pakistan ,Child ,Porphyromonas gingivalis ,Periodontal Diseases ,biology ,business.industry ,Calculus (dental) ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,stomatognathic diseases ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Logistic Models ,Caribbean Region ,England ,chemistry ,Africa ,Actinobacillus ,Periodontics ,Disease Susceptibility ,Thiomersal ,medicine.symptom ,Gingival Hemorrhage ,business - Abstract
The aim of this study was to determine the prevalence of Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans, Porphyromonas gingivalis and Prevotella intermedia in a group of adolescents and investigate the association of these organisms with various clinical parameters. A total of 527, 11-13-year-old children, of whom 333 (63%) were white Caucasian, 187 (35%) Indo-Pakistani and 7 (1%) Afro-Caribbean, participated in the study. Subgingival plaque samples, collected from the mesio-buccal of both upper first permanent molars using sterile paper points, were stored in phosphate buffered saline with 0.01% thiomersal and analysed for the presence of A. actinomycetemcomitans, P. gingivalis and P. intermedia using ELISA. The mesio-buccal sites of both upper 1st permanent molars were also examined and the presence/absence of supragingival plaque, subgingival calculus, bleeding on probing and pocket depths greater than 3 mm were recorded. The % of white Caucasian children in whom the monoclonal antibody identified at least 1 site with A. actinomycetemcomitans, P. gingivalis and P. intermedia were 4%, 3% and 2%, respectively, and for Indo-Pakistanis were 3%, 17% and 2%. The difference for P. gingivalis was statistically significant (p0.001). The associations between the clinical parameters and the 3 organisms were considered separately for both upper first molar sites. The prevalence of P. gingivalis was higher for sites with subgingival calculus, pockets3 mm and bleeding on probing (p0.01).
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- 1997
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43. Evaluación de la Eficacia Anti-Caries de un Dentífrico con Arginina al 1.5% y 1450ppm de Fluoruro como Monofluorofosfato de Sodio, Usando Fluorescencia Cuantitativa Inducida por Luz (QLF)
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Roger Ellwood, Diane Cummins, Iain A. Pretty, W. Yin, Deyu Hu, Yun Po Zhang, L.R. Mateo, X. Fan, and X. Li
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Dental health ,Philosophy ,General Dentistry ,Humanities - Abstract
W. Yin , D.Y. Hu , X. Li , X. Fan , Y.P. Zhang , I.A. Pretty , L.R. Mateo , D. Cummins , R.P. Ellwood * a State Key Laboratory of Oral Diseases, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China Colgate-Palmolive Technology Center, River Road, Piscataway, NJ, USA Dental Health Unit, Skelton House, Manchester Science Park, Manchester, UK d LRM Statistical Consulting, Hoboken, NJ, USA j o u r n a l o f d e n t i s t r y x x x ( 2 0 1 4 ) x x x – x x x
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- 2013
44. The Seattle Care Pathway for securing oral health in older patients
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Mark S. Wolff, Angus Walls, Gert-Jan van der Putten, Eric Rooney, Frauke Müller, William Murray Thomson, Michael I. MacEntee, Elisa M. Ghezzi, Iain A. Pretty, Edward C. M. Lo, and Roger Ellwood
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Gerontology ,Washington ,Evidence-based practice ,Frail Elderly ,Oral Health ,Vulnerable Populations ,Health Services Accessibility ,Dental Care for Aged ,Older patients ,Care pathway ,Medicine ,Humans ,General Dentistry ,Aged ,business.industry ,Dental care ,ddc:617.6 ,Skill mix ,Workforce ,Critical Pathways ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Dependant ,business ,Delivery of Health Care ,Needs Assessment ,Dependency (project management) - Abstract
There is a need for a structured, evidence based approach to care for older dental patients. The following article describes the development of the Seattle Care Pathway based upon a workshop held in 2013. An overview is provided on the key issues of older persons dental care including the demography shift, the concept of frailty, the need for effective prevention and treatment to be linked to levels of dependency and the need for a varied and well educated work force. The pathway is presented in tabular form and further illustrated by the examples in the form of clinical scenarios. The pathway is an evidence based, pragmatic approach to care designed to be globally applicable but flexible enough to be adapted for local needs and circumstances. Research will be required to evaluate the pathways application to this important group of patients.
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- 2013
45. Quantitative light-induced fluorescence to measure enamel remineralization in vitro
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Roger Ellwood, Iain A. Pretty, A. Rege, I. Petrou, R.P. Santarpia, Juliana Gomez, and B. Cantore
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Time Factors ,Light ,Measure (physics) ,Acrylic Resins ,Fluorescence ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,stomatognathic system ,Hardness ,Humans ,Dental Enamel ,General Dentistry ,Dentifrices ,Acetic Acid ,Remineralisation ,Enamel paint ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,In vitro ,Cariostatic Agents ,stomatognathic diseases ,Durapatite ,chemistry ,visual_art ,Tooth Remineralization ,Light induced ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Sodium Fluoride ,Fluoride ,Biomedical engineering - Abstract
The aim of this study was to compare the ability of quantitative light-induced fluorescence (QLF) and surface microhardness (SMH) to measure the remineralization of enamel subsurface lesions, using a pH-cycling model including treatment with 0-ppm, 550-ppm or 1,100-ppm sodium fluoride (NaF) dentifrices. Methods: Subsurface lesions were created in human enamel specimens (n = 36) and exposed to a remineralization pH-cycling model for 14 days. The pH-cycling model was performed in an automated system where specimens were subjected to a demineralizing solution for 20 min and treatment for 1 min and were then remineralized for 7 h 39 min, 3 times daily. The treatments consisted of 3 NaF, silica-containing dentifrices (0 ppm F; 550 ppm F; 1,100 ppm F). The outcome variables were: change from baseline in surface hardness and percentage change from baseline in fluorescence. An ANCOVA explored differences between different treatment groups (at the p < 0.05 level). Associations between QLF and SMH were evaluated using Spearman's correlation coefficient. Results: The percentage SMH changes were 14.9 ± 2.1%, 56.6 ± 9.6% and 103.9 ± 14.6% for the 0-, 550- and 1,100-ppm F dentifrices, respectively. The percentage fluorescence changes were 15.6 ± 7.1%, 59.8 ± 11.9% and 85 ± 13.2%, respectively. The differences between all pairwise comparisons were statistically significant for both methods (p = 0.001). QLF correlated with SMH (r = 0.67). Conclusions: Both the SMH and QLF methods demonstrated a significant F dose response for toothpaste in this in vitro remineralization model, and both methods were able to distinguish treatments with different F levels.
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- 2013
46. Evidence on existing caries risk assessment systems: Are they predictive of future caries?
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Roger Ellwood, Juliana Gomez, Marisol Tellez, Amid I. Ismail, and Iain A. Pretty
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medicine.medical_specialty ,MEDLINE ,Cariogram ,Dentistry ,CAMBRA ,Disease ,Dental Caries ,Risk Assessment ,law.invention ,Randomized controlled trial ,Risk Factors ,law ,medicine ,Humans ,Disease management (health) ,Prospective cohort study ,General Dentistry ,Risk assessment ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Reproducibility of Results ,Prognosis ,Family medicine ,Dental caries ,business ,Prediction - Abstract
AIM: To critically appraise evidence for the prediction of caries using four caries risk assessment (CRA) systems/guidelines (Cariogram, Caries Management by Risk Assessment (CAMBRA), American Dental Association (ADA), and American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry (AAPD)). This review focused on prospective cohort studies or randomized controlled trials. METHODS: A systematic search strategy was developed to locate papers published in Medline Ovid and Cochrane databases. The search identified 539 scientific reports, and after title and abstract review, 137 were selected for full review and 14 met the following inclusion criteria: (i) used as validating criterion caries incidence/increment, (ii) involved human subjects and natural carious lesions, and (iii) published in peer-reviewed journals. In addition, papers were excluded if they met one or more of the following criteria: (i) incomplete description of sample selection, outcomes, or small sample size and (ii) not meeting the criteria for best evidence under the prognosis category of the Oxford Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine. RESULTS: There are wide variations among the systems in terms of definitions of caries risk categories, type and number of risk factors/markers, and disease indicators. The Cariogram combined sensitivity and specificity for predicting caries in permanent dentition ranges from 110 to 139 and is the only system for which prospective studies have been conducted to assess its validity. The Cariogram had limited prediction utility in preschool children, and a moderate to good performance for sorting out elderly individuals into caries risk groups. One retrospective analysis on CAMBRA's CRA reported higher incidence of cavitated lesions among those assessed as extreme-risk patients when compared with those at low risk. CONCLUSION: The evidence on the validity for existing systems for CRA is limited. It is unknown if the identification of high-risk individuals can lead to more effective long-term patient management that prevents caries initiation and arrests or reverses the progression of lesions. There is an urgent need to develop valid and reliable methods for caries risk assessment that are based on best evidence for prediction and disease management rather than opinions of experts.
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- 2013
47. Potential Modern Alternative Designs for Caries Clinical Trials (CCTs) and How These can be Validated against the Conventional Model
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A.R. Biesbrock, Roger Ellwood, S.R. Smith, and R.K. Chesters
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0301 basic medicine ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,030206 dentistry ,Dental Caries ,Cariostatic Agents ,Clinical trial ,03 medical and health sciences ,Treatment Outcome ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Research Design ,medicine ,Humans ,Medical physics ,Safety ,business ,General Dentistry ,Forecasting - Abstract
The main reasons that industry runs caries clinical trials (CCTs) are to provide proof of efficacy and to collect in vivo safety data on new products. In recent years, predominantly due to declining caries levels and the use of positive controls, the cost of performing these CCTs has escalated. It is now reaching the stage where it is becoming commercially prohibitive to conduct new studies. This is likely to stifle innovation of new anticaries products, and we now need new, more discriminatory, faster, and less expensive study designs. There are many ways in which the design of CCTs may be changed, such as improving diagnostic efficiency, improving data handling/statistical modeling, and using high-risk populations. However, it is paramount that the overriding principle behind CCT design validation must be that the results/conclusions from any new design are in line with those shown previously by ‘conventional’ CCTs, to ensure the maintenance of standards for both efficacy and safety. It is suggested that the validation of any new trial design must involve comparisons with regimens previously shown in conventional CCTs to have different anticaries efficacies. For example, since several clinical trials have shown convincing evidence for a monotonic dose response for fluoride at least up to levels of 2500 ppm F, one could choose two products, differing solely in their fluoride level. One aim for this workshop is to identify and agree on validation principles for new clinical trial designs. This will facilitate general international acceptance of novel smaller/faster CCTs designs both now and in the future. We recognize that any new design must not compromise the standard of proof of either efficacy or safety. In addition, any principles will need to take account of current understanding of the caries process, while recognizing the need for change to match future developments in cariology. Finally, the mechanism of action of the test product must be considered, in assessments of the acceptability of novel designs, if this differs markedly from the regimens used to validate the design.
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- 2004
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48. Measuring initial enamel erosion with quantitative light-induced fluorescence and optical coherence tomography: an in vitro validation study
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Iain A. Pretty, Christian Zakian, Hooi Pin Chew, and Roger Ellwood
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Validation study ,Materials science ,Time Factors ,Light ,Dentistry ,In Vitro Techniques ,Fluorescence ,Beverages ,Optical coherence tomography ,Hardness ,medicine ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Humans ,Scattering, Radiation ,Tooth Erosion ,Dental Enamel ,General Dentistry ,Tooth Demineralization ,Orange juice ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Enamel paint ,business.industry ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,Demineralization ,visual_art ,Erosion ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Light induced ,Disease Progression ,business ,Tomography, Optical Coherence ,Biomedical engineering ,Citrus sinensis - Abstract
Background: Measurement of initial enamel erosion is currently limited to in vitro methods. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) and quantitative light-induced fluorescence (QLF) have been used clinically to study advanced erosion. Little is known about their potential on initial enamel erosion. Objectives: To evaluate the sensitivity of QLF and OCT in detecting initial dental erosion in vitro. Methods: 12 human incisors were embedded in resin except for a window on the buccal surface. Bonding agent was applied to half of the window, creating an exposed and non-exposed area. Baseline measurements were taken with QLF, OCT and surface microhardness. Samples were immersed in orange juice for 60 min and measurements taken stepwise every 10 min. QLF was used to compare the loss of fluorescence between the two areas. The OCT system, OCS1300SS (Thorlabs Ltd.), was used to record the intensity of backscattered light of both areas. Multiple linear regression and paired t test were used to compare the change of the outcome measures. Results: All 3 instruments demonstrated significant dose responses with the erosive challenge interval (p < 0.05) and a detection threshold of 10 min from baseline. Thereafter, surface microhardness demonstrated significant changes after every 10 min of erosion, QLF at 4 erosive intervals (20, 40, 50 and 60 min) while OCT at only 2 (50 and 60 min). Conclusion: It can be concluded that OCT and QLF were able to detect demineralization after 10 min of erosive challenge and could be used to monitor the progression of demineralization of initial enamel erosion in vitro.
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- 2012
49. Caries clinical trial methods for the assessment of oral care products in the 21st century
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Juliana Gomez, Roger Ellwood, and Iain A. Pretty
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Clinical Trials as Topic ,Diagnostic methods ,business.industry ,MEDLINE ,Dentistry ,Caries incidence ,Positive control ,General Medicine ,Dental Caries ,Clinical trial ,Therapeutic approach ,Research Design ,Medicine ,Humans ,Enamel caries ,business ,Root caries - Abstract
Traditionally, caries clinical trials of oral care products have focused on the prevention of caries in children and adolescents at the “cavitation” level. Because of a general reduction in caries incidence and the use of positive control comparators, studies have grown both in size and duration to improve statistical power. Currently, they tend to be of 2 to 3 years’ duration, with up to 2,000 high-risk individuals per group. During the past decade, there has been a shift in emphasis from a restorative approach to the treatment of dental caries to a therapeutic approach focused on the remineralization of early caries lesions. However, caries clinical trials of oral care products have not often reflected this paradigm change. This manuscript reviews alternative caries clinical trial methods for oral care products. It is concluded that methods focused on the detection and monitoring of enamel caries and root caries, by visual approaches such as ICDAS and instrumental methods such as QLF, Diagnodent, and Electrical Caries Monitors, provide viable alternatives to traditional methods. In particular, such approaches more accurately reflect the modes of action of many therapeutic agents and formulations and may reduce the cost and duration of product innovation.
- Published
- 2012
50. Histological validation of near-infrared reflectance multispectral imaging technique for caries detection and quantification
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Juliana Gomez, Silvia Salsone, Roger Ellwood, Iain A. Pretty, Christian Zakian, Mark Dickinson, Andrew M. Taylor, and Giuseppe Lombardo
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Molar ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Materials science ,Infrared Rays ,Multispectral image ,Biomedical Engineering ,Dentistry ,Image processing ,Dental Caries ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Biomaterials ,stomatognathic system ,Dentin ,medicine ,Medical imaging ,Humans ,Spectroscopy, Near-Infrared ,business.industry ,Diagnosis, Oral ,Spectrum Analysis ,Near-infrared spectroscopy ,Optical Imaging ,Reproducibility of Results ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Spectral imaging ,stomatognathic diseases ,Imaging spectroscopy ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,business ,Biomedical engineering - Abstract
Near infrared (NIR) multispectral imaging is a novel noninvasive technique that maps and quantifies dental caries. The technique has the ability to reduce the confounding effect of stain present on teeth. The aim of this study was to develop and validate a quantitative NIR multispectral imaging system for caries detection and assessment against a histological reference standard. The proposed technique is based on spectral imaging at specific wavelengths in the range from 1000 to 1700 nm. A total of 112 extracted teeth (molars and premolars) were used and images of occlusal surfaces at different wavelengths were acquired. Three spectral reflectance images were combined to generate a quantitative lesion map of the tooth. The maximum value of the map at the corresponding histological section was used as the NIR caries score. The NIR caries score significantly correlated with the histological reference standard (Spearman's Coefficient=0.774, p
- Published
- 2012
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