125 results on '"fillings"'
Search Results
2. Regional Epidemiological Study on the Dental Status of the First Permanent Molar in Romanian Schoolchildren.
- Author
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Beresescu, Liana, Beresescu, Gabriela Felicia, Esian, Daniela, Vlasa, Alexandru, Benedek, Csilla, Sabau, Raluca, and Stoica, Alexandra Mihaela
- Abstract
Background/Objectives: Dental caries remains a significant public health challenge in Romania, with recent studies reporting a prevalence of 40% in children's permanent teeth, with 90% of cases untreated. This study aimed to evaluate the dental status of the first permanent molars in children aged 11–12 years. Methods: This cross-sectional study was conducted over 12 months at the Integrated Center for Dental Medicine in Târgu Mureș and two private clinics in Transylvania. A total of 516 children, aged 11–12 years, were examined using the ICDAS II classification. Data on carious lesions and dental treatments performed were collected. Results: Of the 2064 first permanent molars examined, 57.99% had carious lesions, fillings, or extractions, while 41.28% were free from caries. Among the affected molars, 41.71% had untreated caries, 9.30% were filled, and 6.25% were sealed. Boys showed a significantly higher prevalence of advanced lesions (ICDAS 4–6) compared to girls. Caries predominantly affected the pits and fissures (87.46%). Conclusions: This study reveals a high prevalence of carious lesions in first permanent molars and a low rate of treatment. The findings emphasize the need for improved oral health education, increased access to dental care, and the development of national strategies to prevent and treat dental caries in children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Evaluating the usability of recycled aggregates as fill materials depending on the composition and strength of their grains.
- Author
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Ok, Bahadir and Colakoglu, Huseyin
- Subjects
MINERAL aggregates ,CONSTRUCTION & demolition debris ,RECYCLED concrete aggregates ,SPECIFIC gravity ,COMPOSITION of grain - Abstract
While recycling is a topic of contemporary relevance, there is a scarcity of research on the engineering characteristics of construction and demolition wastes with different levels of grain strength and composition of debris, which impose constraints on their potential for reuse. This study aims to increase the use of recycled aggregates in fillings, addressing a gap in the literature. For this purpose, large-scale direct shear and California bearing ratio tests were conducted on nine diverse recycled aggregates from different construction works. The test outcomes were compared to those obtained from natural aggregates (NA) to draw a meaningful conclusion. The impact of the specimens' water content and relative density on the findings was discussed. Results demonstrated that the shear strength of recycled aggregates is significantly affected by the compressive strength of the concrete within the recycled aggregates. Besides, increasing the percentage of NA or relative density improved the specimen's shear strength. On the other hand, it was determined that the high water content of the crushed bricks reduced the fill's quality. As a result of the study, equations were suggested for use in filling design. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Regional Epidemiological Study on the Dental Status of the First Permanent Molar in Romanian Schoolchildren
- Author
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Liana Beresescu, Gabriela Felicia Beresescu, Daniela Esian, Alexandru Vlasa, Csilla Benedek, Raluca Sabau, and Alexandra Mihaela Stoica
- Subjects
permanent first molar ,dental caries ,ICDAS II classification ,sealings ,fillings ,Dentistry ,RK1-715 - Abstract
Background/Objectives: Dental caries remains a significant public health challenge in Romania, with recent studies reporting a prevalence of 40% in children’s permanent teeth, with 90% of cases untreated. This study aimed to evaluate the dental status of the first permanent molars in children aged 11–12 years. Methods: This cross-sectional study was conducted over 12 months at the Integrated Center for Dental Medicine in Târgu Mureș and two private clinics in Transylvania. A total of 516 children, aged 11–12 years, were examined using the ICDAS II classification. Data on carious lesions and dental treatments performed were collected. Results: Of the 2064 first permanent molars examined, 57.99% had carious lesions, fillings, or extractions, while 41.28% were free from caries. Among the affected molars, 41.71% had untreated caries, 9.30% were filled, and 6.25% were sealed. Boys showed a significantly higher prevalence of advanced lesions (ICDAS 4–6) compared to girls. Caries predominantly affected the pits and fissures (87.46%). Conclusions: This study reveals a high prevalence of carious lesions in first permanent molars and a low rate of treatment. The findings emphasize the need for improved oral health education, increased access to dental care, and the development of national strategies to prevent and treat dental caries in children.
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- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Early hydration heat release and strength evolution of cemented backfill with graded fine tailings
- Author
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Yun-peng KOU, Mo-chuan GUO, Yu-ye TAN, Zhao-jun QI, Ze-pu SONG, and Wei-dong SONG
- Subjects
graded fine tailings ,fillings ,early stage ,hydration exothermic ,resistivity ,strength evolution ,Mining engineering. Metallurgy ,TN1-997 ,Environmental engineering ,TA170-171 - Abstract
In this work, the early hydration reaction and mechanical evolution characteristics of graded fine tailing cemented backfill are studied. The hydration exothermicity and electrical resistance characteristics of backfill slurry with different lime sand ratios are tested, and the microscopic morphology characteristics of early hydration products are analyzed according to scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Finally, on the basis of uniaxial compression mechanical test results, the early hydration reaction process and the effect of the products on the strength evolution of the backfill are analyzed. The results showed that the exothermic process of slurry hydration underwent rapid reaction stage I, induction stage II, acceleration stage III, deceleration stage IV, and stabilization stage V. The volume resistivity underwent increasing stage I, decreasing stage II, and accelerated increasing stages III. The slurry lime sand ratio affects the hydration heat release and volume resistivity. The larger ratio is, the greater the hydration heat release rate and heat release, the more hydration products are generated, and the greater the volume resistivity. An increase in the lime sand ratio prolongs the induction time of the hydration reaction and increases the rate of the hydration reaction during the induction period. At the same time, it retards the growth of volume resistivity. The larger the lime sand ratio is, the stronger the retarding effect and the larger the retarding effect on the growth of slurry volume resistivity. The rate of the hydration reaction directly determines the formation speed of the backfill strength. When the main components of the filling material, C3S and C3A, are dissolved rapidly in water, much heat is released. The generated Ca(OH)2 reduces the volume resistivity of the slurry and accelerates the growth of the backfill strength; the AFt generated subsequently compacts the pores between particles, blocks the dissolution of ions, decreases the rate of heat release, and prevents the growth of backfill strength. The backfill strength increases rapidly from 0–3 d and slowly from 3–7 d. When the hydration reaction is basically completed after 14 d, the filling material is solidified overall, and its strength is basically stable. The change in backfill strength first increases and then gradually decreases until stabilizing. These research conclusions provide theoretical support and scientific guidance for mining to adopt graded fine tailings to fill the underground goaf and control the temperature of the deep stope.
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- 2023
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6. Long-Service-Life Rigid Polyurethane Foam Fillings for Spent Fuel Transportation Casks.
- Author
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Zhang, Zhenyu, Shen, Guangyao, Li, Rongbo, Yuan, Lei, Feng, Hongfu, Chen, Xiuming, Qiu, Feng, Yuan, Guangyin, and Zhuang, Xiaodong
- Subjects
- *
FOAM , *SPENT reactor fuels , *URETHANE foam , *FIREPROOFING , *MECHANICAL behavior of materials , *FLAME - Abstract
Soft materials bearing rigid, lightweight, and vibration-dampening properties offer distinct advantages over traditional wooden and metal-based fillings for spent fuel transport casks, due to their low density, tunable structure, excellent mechanical properties, and ease of processing. In this study, a novel type of rigid polyurethane foam is prepared using a conventional polycondensation reaction between isocyanate and hydroxy groups. Moreover, the density and size of the pores in these foams are precisely controlled through simultaneous gas generation. The as-prepared polyurethane exhibits high thermal stability exceeding 185 °C. Lifetime predictions based on thermal testing indicate that these polyurethane foams could last up to over 60 years, which is double the lifetime of conventional materials of about 30 years. Due to their occlusive structure, the mechanical properties of these polymeric materials meet the design standards for spent fuel transport casks, with maximum compression and tensile stresses of 6.89 and 1.37 MPa, respectively, at a testing temperature of −40 °C. In addition, these polymers exhibit effective flame retardancy; combustion ceased within 2 s after removal of the ignition source. All in all, this study provides a simple strategy for preparing rigid polymeric foams, presenting them as promising prospects for application in spent fuel transport casks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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7. Pastry
- Author
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Farooq, Saqib, Shah, Manzoor Ahmad, Mir, Shabir Ahmad, Shah, Manzoor Ahmad, editor, Valiyapeediyekkal Sunooj, Kappat, editor, and Mir, Shabir Ahmad, editor
- Published
- 2023
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8. The law of water inrush disaster of collapse column considering the influence of fillings activation
- Author
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LI Dong, LIN Zhibin, YANG Dafang
- Subjects
mine water hazards ,roadway water inrush ,collapse column ,fillings ,flac3d ,Mining engineering. Metallurgy ,TN1-997 - Abstract
In order to study the water-inrush disaster law of collapse column under the influence of interstitial material activation, a return air roadway of Shenhua Group was taken as the research object. The strength reduction and permeability mutation caused by rock destruction inside and outside collapse column and activation and loss of fillings were considered. FLAC3D simulation was used to study the characteristics of displacement, permeability coefficient, pore water pressure and water inflow of collapse column and surrounding rock in the process of roadway excavation. On this basis, the influence of fillings packed height of collapse column on water inrush was analyzed. The results show that: with the increase of the distance between roadway and collapse column fillings layer, the width and depth of the activated loss of collapse column fillings in the roadway floor will be larger and larger, resulting in the rock displacement between collapse column water-conducting layer and roadway bottom is increasing and the overall slip trend appears. Finally, when the roadway driving face exceeds 1 m of the collapse column central axis, the high-pressure water of the collapse column injects water into the roadway through the activation and loss channel of fillings. And the water inrush has the characteristics of large volume, suddenness and hysteresis. The larger the fillings packed height of collapse column is, the later the water inrush time node of collapse column relative to roadway excavation surface is. However, when the fillings packed height of collapse column reaches 22 m, water inrush will not occur in the collapse column.
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- 2023
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9. Advances in Shear-Seepage Properties of Rock Mass Filled with Joint Fissure.
- Author
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Jiyun ZHANG, Shuren WANG, Yunxing CAO, Weibin MA, Zhichao LI, and Wenxue CHEN
- Subjects
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ROCK properties , *SEEPAGE , *CYCLIC loads , *DYNAMIC loads , *IMPACT loads , *NUMERICAL calculations - Abstract
Since joint fissures are distributed extensively within rock masses, rock masses evolve into "sandwich" shapes when filled with joint fissures under long-term geological action, which causes rock discontinuities and destroys rock stability. This study reviews the advances in the shear-seepage properties of rock masses filled with joint fissures (RMFJFs) under static, quasistatic, and dynamic loads, including laboratory experiments, theoretical analysis, and numerical calculations. Results show that the shear properties of RMFJFs are closely associated with the strength of the fillings, the filling degree, and the roughness of the joints. RMFJFs develop under the stress of surrounding rocks, and their seepage properties are therefore affected by the surrounding stress and the filling degree, the rock layer thickness, and the porosity of the rock or fillings. However, detailed studies on the seepage properties of RMFJFs under cyclic loading, impact loading, and different shear rates are lacking. Finally, the existing problems in the research on the seepage properties of RMFJFs are clarified, a constructive research strategy is proposed, and the related trends are discussed in light of the overall mechanical behavior of RMFJFs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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10. Experimental study on mechanical characteristics and permeability evolution during the coupled hydromechanical failure of sandstone containing a filled fissure.
- Author
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Du, Yiteng, Li, Tingchun, Wang, Binxu, Zhang, Shilin, Li, Hui, Zhang, Hao, and Zhu, Qingwen
- Subjects
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PERMEABILITY , *SANDSTONE , *ROCK mechanics , *WATER pressure , *CRACK propagation (Fracture mechanics) - Abstract
In this study, triaxial seepage tests on sandstone specimens containing a preexisting fissure were conducted for three different fissure filling states to investigate the effect of fillings on the mechanical characteristics, fracture behaviors and permeability evolution during the seepage stress-induced failure of jointed rocks. Furthermore, the final 3D crack networks were reconstructed using the X-ray CT technique to qualitatively and quantitatively reveal the internal damage characteristics. The results show that the enhancing effect of fillings on the stress thresholds of specimens with a low-dip fissure is greater than that of specimens with a high-dip fissure, especially for the peak strength, while the axial stiffness is more sensitive to the fissure inclination than the filling state. The mud and sand fillings obviously affect the crack initiation angles and change the failure types around the fissure from tension to shear, especially in specimens with a high-dip fissure. Interestingly, the types and initiation locations of the main cracks may change from those observed for unfilled specimens due to the presence of sand fillings. The reconstructed 3D internal failure models show that the crack paths and damage extent inside the specimens are both affected by the fillings and water pressure. Moreover, the permeability evolution is dependent on both the cracking behaviors and fillings. The permeability in the crack incubation stage is more affected by crack propagation than fillings, but the plugging effect of fillings is fully exerted after the crack networks and shear fractures are generated, especially in specimens with a low-dip fissure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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11. State Stress Analysis of Dental Restoration Materials Using the ANSYS Program.
- Author
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Karash, Emad Toma, Slewa, Muna Y., and AL-Maula, Bushra Habeeb
- Subjects
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STRAINS & stresses (Mechanics) , *DENTAL fillings , *DENTAL materials , *STRESS concentration , *TEETH , *PORCELAIN - Abstract
Dental restorations that successfully bind to dental tissue and cosmetically mimic the tooth are in higher demand. Dental professionals can reconstruct posterior teeth using inlays/onlays, which combine functional and anatomical factors with aesthetic considerations. Inlays/onlays are made of porcelain and resin with no metallic basis. In this research, cases of deformation and the distribution of different stresses and strains for a tooth second upper molar crown were studied by designing four two dimensional mathematical models, the first for a tooth made of natural materials, and for the other three mathematical models of teeth with fillings from different materials (Zirconia, Titanium, Ceramic), and impact force was applied in three places, the first in the middle the filling and the second in the contact area between the filling and the tooth, and the third force shed between the first force and the second force. The results showed that the least deformation was in the model containing the zircon filler, while the highest deformation was in the model containing the ceramic filler. As well as from the important results, it was found that the model containing the ceramic filler is in a suitable fit with the model of the natural tooth in terms of the distribution of stresses, strains and deformation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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12. Cracking Characteristics and Damage Assessment of Filled Rocks Using Acoustic Emission Technology.
- Author
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Niu, Yong, Hu, Yun-Jin, and Wang, Jin-Guo
- Subjects
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ACOUSTIC emission , *MECHANICAL failures , *STRESS-strain curves , *STRUCTURAL stability , *ROCK properties , *ROCK deformation - Abstract
Natural flaws containing fillings strongly affect the mechanical properties and failure process of rocks in practical engineering. In this work, uniaxial compression tests are performed on filled and unfilled red sandstone specimens containing two parallel dentate flaws. Two monitoring technologies––acoustic emission (AE) and high-speed camera––are employed to record the cracking process of the flawed rocks. The effects of filling and ligament angles on the mechanical properties of the flawed rocks are analyzed. The relationship between AE parameters and stress–strain curves is established in order to evaluate the cracking process. The fracture behaviors between the filled and unfilled specimens are qualitatively compared. An intensity analysis method, based on the historic index and severity, is employed to assess the damage level of the flawed rocks. Simultaneously, a judgmental design criterion, including safety, early warning, and instability, is developed, which can be employed to evaluate the stability of rock structures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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13. 微区原位测温技术建立储层填隙物成岩演化序列——以鄂尔多斯盆地陇东地区长8为例.
- Author
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师强 and 时保宏
- Abstract
In order to study the evolution process of interstitial material in Chang 8 reservoir, Through casting thin section, scanning electron microscopy, cathodoluminescence, carbon and oxygen isotope, laser Raman, electron probe and other analytical techniques, in-situ micro-zone temperature measurement analysis was carried out.The formation temperatures of chlorite, illite and carbonate cement in Chang 8 reservoir in Longdong area were determined by micro-zone in situ temperature measurement analysis,and the diagenetic sequence of Chang 8 reservoir interstitials was quantitatively analyzed. The study shows that the Chang 8 reservoir mainly develops five types of interstitial material, namely chlorite, illite, kaolinite, siliceous and carbonate cement, and the content of interstitial material is significantly different. The filling sequence of interstitial material in Chang 8 reservoir in Longdong area is : stage I chlorite rim→stage I carbonate cementation→stage I authigenic quartz→kaolinite+stage II authigenic quartz→stage I illite→stage II chlorite+stage II illite+stage II carbonate→stage III authigenic quartz→stage III illite→stage III carbonate→stage III chlorite. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
14. Filling Characteristics of Radiolarian Siliceous Shell Cavities at Wufeng-Longmaxi Shale in Sichuan Basin, Southwest China.
- Author
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Zhou, Xiaofeng, Liang, Pingping, Li, Xizhe, Guo, Wei, Zhang, Xiaowei, and Yu, Jichen
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SHALE , *CALCITE , *PYRITES , *MICROBIAL metabolism , *CALCIUM carbonate , *HYDROGEN sulfide , *ORGANIC compounds , *BACTERIAL growth - Abstract
Both complete and uncompleted radiolarian siliceous shells were developed at Wufeng-Longmaxi radiolarian siliceous shale laminae in Sichuan Basin. Micro- and ultra-micropetrological observation suggests that they were successively filled by calcite, pyrite and organic–silicon complex, where pyrite and organic–silicon complex filled dissolved pores associated with calcite during sedimentation. Calcite was derived from calcium carbonate produced by microbial activities at the seawater surface. The environment of radiolarian siliceous shell cavities, which was suitable for sulfate reducing bacterial growth or dissolved hydrogen sulfide reducing Fe3+, contributed positively to pyrite development. Organic–silicon complex development was related to microorganism metabolism that was an important silica source. Honeycomb-like organic pores were developed in cavities with complete shells, but were not developed in cavities with uncompleted shells. This is because the latter could not withstand overburden pressure compared with the former. The only approach to figure out organic pore carriers and understand sequences and development processes of minerals and organic matter is to select weakly compacted radiolarian siliceous shale laminae to carry out micro- and ultra-micropetrological observation and geochemical testing via various technologies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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15. 枸杞馅料的制作工艺及其主要营养成分分析.
- Author
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王晨祥, 彭健, 温靖, 李璐, 余元善, 吴继军, and 徐玉娟
- Subjects
RAW materials ,STATISTICAL correlation ,CAROTENOIDS ,GOURDS ,HARDNESS ,POLYPHENOLS - Abstract
Copyright of Food Research & Development is the property of Food Research & Development Editorial Department and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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16. Rotor Stress Analysis of High-Speed Surface-Mounted Permanent Magnet Motors with Segmented Poles Considering Fillings
- Author
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Xing, Zezhi, Wang, Xiuhe, and Zhao, Wenliang
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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17. Comparative characteristics of preparations for temporary root canal filling in treatment apical periodontitis
- Subjects
корневой канал ,периодонтит ,пломбирование ,паста ,root canal ,periodontal ,fillings ,pasta ,Dentistry ,RK1-715 - Abstract
Apical periodontitis is an infectious disease caused by microorganisms colonizing the root canal system. For optimization of endodontic treatment, bacterial populations within the root canal should be eliminated or at least significantly reduced to levels where it is possible to recover the periapical tissues. This article discusses some aspects of bacterial persistence before and after the therapy, including the use efficiency of a new drug for the temporary filling of the root canal based on the data of microbiological studies.
- Published
- 2020
18. Comparative characteristics of preparations for temporary root canal filling in treatment apical periodontitis
- Subjects
корневой канал ,периодонтит ,пломбирование ,паста ,root canal ,periodontal ,fillings ,pasta ,Dentistry ,RK1-715 - Abstract
Apical periodontitis is an infectious disease caused by microorganisms colonizing the root canal system. For optimization of endodontic treatment, bacterial populations within the root canal should be eliminated or at least significantly reduced to levels where it is possible to recover the periapical tissues. This article discusses some aspects of bacterial persistence before and after the therapy, including the use efficiency of a new drug for the temporary filling of the root canal based on the data of microbiological studies.
- Published
- 2020
19. Evaluarea opţiunilor dentiştilor privind utilizarea materialelor de obturaţie de bază - studiu pilot statistic.
- Author
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Mărgărit, Ruxandra, Cojocaru, Denisa, Ciavoi, Sergiu-Mihai, Tărlungeanu, Ioana-Daniela, and Andrei, Oana-Cella
- Abstract
Copyright of dentalTarget is the property of dentalTarget and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
20. Hamiltonian and pseudo-Hamiltonian cycles and fillings in simplicial complexes.
- Author
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Mathew, Rogers, Newman, Ilan, Rabinovich, Yuri, and Rajendraprasad, Deepak
- Subjects
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HAMILTONIAN graph theory , *GENERALIZATION - Abstract
We introduce and study a d -dimensional generalization of graph Hamiltonian cycles. These are the Hamiltonian d -dimensional cycles in K n d (the complete simplicial d -complex over a vertex set of size n). Hamiltonian d -cycles are the simple d -cycles of a complete rank, or, equivalently, of size 1 + ( n − 1 d ). The discussion is restricted to the fields F 2 and Q. For d = 2 , we characterize the n 's for which Hamiltonian 2-cycles exist. For d = 3 it is shown that Hamiltonian 3-cycles exist for infinitely many n 's. In general, it is shown that there always exist simple d -cycles of size ( n − 1 d ) − O (n d − 3). All the above results are constructive. Our approach naturally extends to (and in fact, involves) d -fillings, generalizing the notion of T -joins in graphs. Given a (d − 1) -cycle Z d − 1 ∈ K n d , F is its d -filling if ∂ F = Z d − 1. We call a d -filling Hamiltonian if it is acyclic and of a complete rank, or, equivalently, is of size ( n − 1 d ). If a Hamiltonian d -cycle Z over F 2 contains a d -simplex σ , then Z ∖ σ is a Hamiltonian d -filling of ∂ σ (a closely related fact is also true for cycles over Q). Thus, the two notions are closely related. Most of the above results about Hamiltonian d -cycles hold for Hamiltonian d -fillings as well. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Diagnosis of caries complications: remark by fulfilled standards of specialized medical care
- Subjects
осложнения кариеса ,пульпит ,периодонтит ,диагностика ,рентгенодиагностика ,каналы корней зубов ,пломбирование ,первичная медицинская документация ,ведомственные стоматологические учреждения ,caries complications ,pulpitis ,periodontitis ,diagnosis ,x-ray diagnostics ,root canals ,fillings ,primary medical records ,departmental dental institution ,Dentistry ,RK1-715 - Abstract
The results of the study of primary medical documentation (PMD) 167 (132 (79.04%) men and 35 (20.96%) women) man held endodontic treatment for various forms of pulpitis and 83 people (73 (87.95%) men and 10 (12.05%) women) held endodontic treatment for various forms of periodontitis. Patients ranged in age from 18 to 55 years of age (young and middle age). The analysis used by physicians diagnostic methods and their frequency in the treatment of pulpitis and periodontitis, as well as their comparison with the departmental standard endodontic treatment. The paper noted the presence of a large number of defects in mine action, as identified in the departmental medical institution metropolis.
- Published
- 2020
22. Ceramic crown inlays as alternative to substitute defects of side teeth with light-conforming composites
- Author
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E. E. Olesov, T. N. Novozemtseva, V. E. Tikhonov, V. N. Olesova, and O. S. Kaganova
- Subjects
inlays ,fillings ,ceramics ,composite ,occlusion ,articulation ,efficiency ,Medicine - Abstract
A clinical and functional examination of the maxillofacial area was performed in 280 patients with the defects of the lateral teeth being replaced with ceramic crown inlays or light-cured composites three years ago. Computer methods were used to assess the articulation, occlusion and tone of the masticatory muscles on the T-Scan III and Bio EMG III devices. In a third of the lateral teeth, an unreasonable increase in indications to composite fillings has been established when more than 50.0% of the occlusal surface is destroyed. Indicators of dental status are significantly better when using ceram- ic inlays compared with fillings made of composite material in the long term after treatment of multiple caries. Ceramic crown inlays prevent occlusal-articulatory disorders and dysfunction of the masticatory apparatus, characteristic in long-term periods for patients with multiple caries when replacement of lateral teeth defects with fillings made of composite.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Biochemical composition and quality of herring preserves with addition of bio-protective cultures.
- Author
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Bazarnova, J., Korableva, N., Ozerova, O., and Moskvicheva, E.
- Subjects
- *
UNSATURATED fatty acids , *OMEGA-3 fatty acids , *ATLANTIC herring , *FISH spoilage , *DOCOSAHEXAENOIC acid , *TRYPTOPHAN - Abstract
Herrings rich in vitamins B12, A, D, minerals, including calcium, potassium, magnesium, iodine, possess high levels of lysine, tyrosine, phenylalanine and tryptophan, as well as omega-3 unsaturated fatty acids, namely eicosapentanoic, docosahexoenoic and docosapentoenoic. To suppress the microbiological spoilage of fish preserves, it is promising to use bio-protective cultures that have minimal impact on the production process and product properties. Bacterial strains are able to exert a static effect on the microflora, which causes biodeterioration of food products. Microorganisms as part of bio-protective cultures are included in the fermentation process, so they can be attributed to ordinary food ingredients, so there is no need to put separate information on the packaging. The chemical composition of the frozen Atlantic and Pacific herring fillet, the amino acid composition of proteins, and the fatty acid composition of lipids were studied. The difference between Atlantic and Pacific herrings was detected, which consists in a significantly higher content of docosahexaenoic acid. The difference in the fractional composition of triacylglycerols for the Atlantic and Pacific herring was established. The microflora of SafePro B-2 biological product (Chr. Hansen GmbH), containing multiple strains of Lactobacillus sakei, and the viability of the culture in preserves fillings were studied. The experimental development of canned food with SafePro B-2 additives was carried out. Microbiological, organoleptic and biochemical indicators of the preserves quality during cold storage were studied. The influence of introduced culture on the dynamics of preserves curing period and their shelf life was established. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Selection of the Optimal Window Type and Orientation for the Two Cities in Serbia and One in Slovakia
- Author
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Jelena M. Djoković, Ružica R. Nikolić, Jan Bujnak, Branislav Hadzima, Filip Pastorek, Renata Dwornicka, and Robert Ulewicz
- Subjects
energy efficiency ,fillings ,glazing ,Technology - Abstract
The necessity of having windows on any building’s façade is not questionable. However, not every window is suitable for any building. The selection of an adequate window must include the analysis of various factors—the most important ones are the type of window (e.g., single or double glazing); filling gas in cavities (e.g., air, argon or some other gas); and placing, i.e., orientation of a window on a façade (facing north, south, or east, etc.). The research presented in this paper is dealing with the calculation of the window thermal loading for the cities of Kragujevac and Bor in Serbia and Žilina in Slovakia. These three cities were selected because they belong to different climate regions, according to the Köppen–Geiger climatic classification. The first two cities in Serbia belong to the same region Cf with difference only in the category of summer—Kragujevac Cfa and Bor Cfb—while the third city—Žilina in Slovakia—belongs to the Dfb region. The calculated thermal loading through the window was obtained as a sum of the thermal loading due to the heat conduction and thermal loading due to the solar radiation. The objective was to find the optimal window construction and orientation of a building’s façade for each of these cities, by varying the type of the window, its frame material and the filling gas. The results show that for the first two cities in Serbia, there is a difference in the window frame material in the optimal window construction, while for the third city (Žilina in Slovakia), the results are the same as for the second city (Bor in Serbia) despite the fact that they belong to different climate regions (Cfb and Dfb, respectively). These results support the fact that the climate affects the optimal window construction for any city/region in the world.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. STUDYING THE EFFECT OF LASER ON MICROLEAKAGE OF LIGHT CURE FILLING FOR ANTERIOR TEETH.
- Author
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Mohammed G. Hamad, Dina A. Mohammed, Tahrir N. Aldelaimi, and Saddam J. Nasser
- Subjects
words ,fillings ,microleakage ,anterior teeth ,Science (General) ,Q1-390 - Abstract
To assess of the microleakage of anterior fillings after the application of laser dental treatment, eight samples of each group were taken .The first group samples are taken to examine the filling with the acid and bonding are used; while the second group samples, the laser and bonding are used; then the third group samples were taken where the laser, acid and bonding were in use.The adhesion resulted for the first group samples was not good because the depth of leakage was high which indicated dye penetration approximating the tooth cavity floor portion.It was noted that the adhesion quality of fillings measured of second group samples was good because the depth of leakage was medium in touching the enamel layer.Adhesion checked for the third group samples shows fillings of high strength since no leakage, penetration of dye
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- 2017
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26. Best-practice prevention alone or with conventional or biological caries management for 3- to 7-year-olds: the FiCTION three-arm RCT
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Anne Maguire, Jan E Clarkson, Gail VA Douglas, Vicky Ryan, Tara Homer, Zoe Marshman, Elaine McColl, Nina Wilson, Luke Vale, Mark Robertson, Alaa Abouhajar, Richard D Holmes, Ruth Freeman, Barbara Chadwick, Christopher Deery, Ferranti Wong, and Nicola PT Innes
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dental caries ,caries prevention ,primary teeth ,prevention ,paediatric dentistry ,restoration ,fillings ,primary care ,dental anxiety ,quality of life ,tooth, deciduous ,cost-effectiveness ,Medical technology ,R855-855.5 - Abstract
Background: Historically, lack of evidence for effective management of decay in primary teeth has caused uncertainty, but there is emerging evidence to support alternative strategies to conventional fillings, which are minimally invasive and prevention orientated. Objectives: The objectives were (1) to assess the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of three strategies for managing caries in primary teeth and (2) to assess quality of life, dental anxiety, the acceptability and experiences of children, parents and dental professionals, and caries development and/or progression. Design: This was a multicentre, three-arm parallel-group, participant-randomised controlled trial. Allocation concealment was achieved by use of a centralised web-based randomisation facility hosted by Newcastle Clinical Trials Unit. Setting: This trial was set in primary dental care in Scotland, England and Wales. Participants: Participants were NHS patients aged 3–7 years who were at a high risk of tooth decay and had at least one primary molar tooth with decay into dentine, but no pain/sepsis. Interventions: Three interventions were employed: (1) conventional with best-practice prevention (local anaesthetic, carious tissue removal, filling placement), (2) biological with best-practice prevention (sealing-in decay, selective carious tissue removal and fissure sealants) and (3) best-practice prevention alone (dietary and toothbrushing advice, topical fluoride and fissure sealing of permanent teeth). Main outcome measures: The clinical effectiveness outcomes were the proportion of children with at least one episode (incidence) and the number of episodes, for each child, of dental pain or dental sepsis or both over the follow-up period. The cost-effectiveness outcomes were the cost per incidence of, and cost per episode of, dental pain and/or dental sepsis avoided over the follow-up period. Results: A total of 72 dental practices were recruited and 1144 participants were randomised (conventional arm, n = 386; biological arm, n = 381; prevention alone arm, n = 377). Of these, 1058 were included in an intention-to-treat analysis (conventional arm, n = 352; biological arm, n = 352; prevention alone arm, n = 354). The median follow-up time was 33.8 months (interquartile range 23.8–36.7 months). The proportion of children with at least one episode of pain or sepsis or both was 42% (conventional arm), 40% (biological arm) and 45% (prevention alone arm). There was no evidence of a difference in incidence or episodes of pain/sepsis between arms. When comparing the biological arm with the conventional arm, the risk difference was –0.02 (97.5% confidence interval –0.10 to 0.06), which indicates, on average, a 2% reduced risk of dental pain and/or dental sepsis in the biological arm compared with the conventional arm. Comparing the prevention alone arm with the conventional arm, the risk difference was 0.04 (97.5% confidence interval –0.04 to 0.12), which indicates, on average, a 4% increased risk of dental pain and/or dental sepsis in the prevention alone arm compared with the conventional arm. Compared with the conventional arm, there was no evidence of a difference in episodes of pain/sepsis among children in the biological arm (incident rate ratio 0.95, 97.5% confidence interval 0.75 to 1.21, which indicates that there were slightly fewer episodes, on average, in the biological arm than the conventional arm) or in the prevention alone arm (incident rate ratio 1.18, 97.5% confidence interval 0.94 to 1.48, which indicates that there were slightly more episodes in the prevention alone arm than the conventional arm). Over the willingness-to-pay values considered, the probability of the biological treatment approach being considered cost-effective was approximately no higher than 60% to avoid an incidence of dental pain and/or dental sepsis and no higher than 70% to avoid an episode of pain/sepsis. Conclusions: There was no evidence of an overall difference between the three treatment approaches for experience of, or number of episodes of, dental pain or dental sepsis or both over the follow-up period. Future work: Recommendations for future work include exploring barriers to the use of conventional techniques for carious lesion detection and diagnosis (e.g. radiographs) and developing and evaluating suitable techniques and strategies for use in young children in primary care. Trial registration: Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN77044005. Funding: This project was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment programme and will be published in full in Health Technology Assessment; Vol. 24, No. 1. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.
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- 2020
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27. Development of Basic Technology for Obtaining Sodium Alginate from Brown Algae.
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Sokolan, Nina, Kuranova, Lyudmila, Voron'ko, Nikolay, and Grokhovskiy, Vladimir
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ALGINIC acid ,SODIUM alginate ,BROWN algae ,INTERMEDIATE goods ,KINEMATIC viscosity ,LAMINARIA ,SEPARATION of variables ,FUCUS - Abstract
The possibility of making sodium alginate from a by-product (fucus semi-finished product), obtained by producing an extract from brown algae of the Fucus family -- fucus bubbly (F.vesiculosus), has been studied. It has been found that up to 80% of the alginic acids contained in the feedstock remain in the fucus semi-finished product, which can also be isolated and used. The principal technology of sodium alginate from the fucus semi-finished product is developed, consisting of the following main stages: preparation of raw materials, reduction, pretreatment, extraction of alginates, isolation of alginic acid, production of sodium alginate, drying. As a result of optimization of the technological scheme, it was possible to increase the yield and improve the quality of the product: the yield of sodium alginate was 4.5% (which is 20% higher than the original), the content of alginic acids increased by 7% and was 92% in terms of dry matter, kinematic the viscosity increased almost twofold - its value reached a value of 500 cSt. Investigations carried out by the Fourier method of IR spectroscopy on the Shimadzu IR Tracer-100 ( Japan) showed that the sodium alginate obtained from the fucus semi-finished by optimized technology is not inferior in quality to sodium alginate produced from laminaria (Sigma Aldrich (USA).) Sodium alginate, made from the fucus semi-finished product, can be used as one of the components of gelling fillings for the production of canned fish in jellies. A technological scheme for processing algae is proposed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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28. 茉莉花福建礼饼加工工艺优化.
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黄琼, 何燕萍, and 陈晓波
- Abstract
Copyright of Food Research & Development is the property of Food Research & Development Editorial Department and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2019
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29. Crosswind influence on cooling capacity in different zones for high level water collecting wet cooling towers based on field test.
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Dang, Zhigang, Gao, Ming, Long, Guoqing, Zou, Jian, He, Suoying, and Sun, Fengzhong
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- *
WATER levels , *COOLING towers , *CROSSWINDS , *ZONE melting , *HYDRAULICS - Abstract
In order to evaluate the thermal performance of different zones for high level water collecting wet cooling towers (HWCTs) precisely, field test was conducted on one real HWCT equipped for a 1000 MW unit under different crosswind and water-spraying density conditions. In this paper, three parameters α s , α f and α r , which represent the cooling capacity of water-spraying zone, fillings zone and rain zone, respectively, are introduced to evaluate the crosswind influence on different zones. The variations of α s , α f and α r under windless and crosswind conditions were researched. The results demonstrate that, under windless condition, α f exceeds 88%. As crosswind velocity rises from 0.28 m/s to 4.79 m/s, when Q = 68646 t/h, α f decreases by 8.8%, while α s keeps around 10%, and α r increases by 5.6%. Additionally, it can be obtained that the cooling capacity of fillings is more outstanding under lower circulating water flow rate and small crosswind velocity conditions. Based on the test data, the fitting equations between α f and crosswind velocity are obtained. Briefly, the cooling capacity of different zones is obtained in this paper, and derived the changing rules of cooling capacity with different crosswind velocity, which can be used to guide the engineering design. • Field test is conducted for high level water collecting wet cooling towers. • Cooling capacity of three zones are studied under crosswind velocity. • Cooling capacity in fillings zone exceeds 88% under windless condition. • Cooling capacity in fillings zone decreases with the rising of crosswind velocity. • Cooling capacity in water-spraying zone keeps stable under crosswind velocity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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30. Synthesis and Characterization of Biomedical Materials.
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Dobrzański, Leszek Adam, Dobrzańska, Joanna, Dobrzańska-Danikiewicz, Anna D., Dobrzański, Lech Bolesław, and Dobrzański, Leszek Adam
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Technology: general issues ,316L stainless steel ,45S5 Bioglass® ,Bioengineering 4.0 ,CAD/CAM methods ,CBCT tomography ,COVID-19 pandemic ,CST ,Co-Cr dental alloys ,Dentistry 4.0 ,FEA ,Industry 4.0 ,MSM ,Ni-Cr-Mo ,Resilon ,SARS-CoV-2 pandemic ,SLM ,SPEC strategy ,Ti(C, N) coating ,Ti6Al4V dental alloy ,V-shaped tooth defects ,additive digital light printing ,additive manufacturing ,additive manufacturing technologies ,antimicrobial properties ,bioactive glass ,bioengineering ,biomaterials ,biomedical implants ,biomedical materials ,bone tissue engineering ,calcium β-glycerophosphate ,caries ,chitosan ,comparative matrices ,corrosion ,corrosion resistance ,cytotoxicity ,dendrological matrix ,dental alloys ,dental engineering ,dental implantology ,dental implants ,dental interventionistic treatment ,dental prophylaxis ,dental prosthesis restoration manufacturing center ,dental prosthetic restorations ,dental prosthetics ,dentist ethics ,dentist safety ,dentistry ,dentistry 4.0 ,dentistry sustainable development ,diblock copolymers ,digital twin ,drug delivery system ,drug delivery systems ,elimination clinical aerosol at the source ,endodontics ,energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscope ,engineers' ethics ,fibroblast cells ,filling materials ,fillings ,flowable composite ,fretting ,fretting wear ,gelatin ,glass-ionomer cement ,gutta-percha ,health ,high drug loading capacity ,hollow mesoporous silica ,hybrid materials ,hybrid multilayer biological-engineering composites biomaterials ,hydrogel material ,hydroxyapatite ,implant ,implant-scaffolds ,in-vitro tests ,industry 4.0 ,injectable scaffolds ,leaching ,light-cured composites ,long and healthy life policy ,medical engineering ,medical ethics ,medical implants ,medicine ,metallography ,microhardness ,n/a ,nanodendrites ,nanoparticles ,nanoprecipitation ,nanostar ,nickel ,nitrogen ,nitrogen absorption ,obturation ,one-pot synthesis ,optimization ,periodontology ,photopolymer materials ,photopolymerization process ,porcelain firing ,porous silica ,procedural benchmarking ,prosthetic restorations ,regenerative medicine ,regression analysis ,response surface methodology ,rheology ,robocasting ,scaffold ,scanning electron microscopy ,sealants ,selective laser sintering ,self-assembly ,sintering ,sodium alginate ,sol-gel ,sol-gel phase transitions ,stainless steel ,stereolithography ,stomatognathic system ,structural X-ray analysis ,surface nitriding ,surgical guide ,tensile and bending strength ,thin films ,titaniumcarbonitride ,toothlessness ,tribological tests ,urethra ,virtual approach ,well-being ,zirconium carbide - Abstract
Summary: This book aims to summarize the latest achievements in the development and manufacturing of modern biomaterials used in modern medicine and dentistry, for example, in cases where, as a result of a traffic or sports accident, aging, resection of organs after oncological surgery, or dangerous inflammation, there is a need to replace lost organs, tissues, and parts of the human body. The essence of biomedical materials is their constant contact with living tissues, organisms, or microorganisms and, therefore, they should meet numerous requirements from various fields, including medicine, biology, chemistry, tissue engineering, and materials science. For this reason, biomaterials must be compatible with the organism, and biocompatibility issues must be addressed before using the product in a clinical setting. The production and synthesis of biomaterials require the use of various technologies and methods to obtain the appropriate material, which is then processed using advanced material processing technologies. Often, however, it is necessary to directly manufacture a specific product with individualized geometric features and properties tailored to the requirements of a particular patient. In such cases, additive manufacturing methods are increasingly used. In this sense, it can be considered that the Biomaterials 4.0 stage has been reached, and detailed information is included in the individual chapters of this book on the achievements in the development and manufacturing of modern biomaterials used in modern regenerative medicine, regenerative dentistry, and tissue engineering.
31. NONUNIFORMITIES OF TWO-PHASE COOLANT DISTRIBUTION IN A HEAT GENERATING PARTICLES BED
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V. V. Sorokin
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steam-water coolant ,fillings ,heat-emitting particles ,nuclear reactor ,Hydraulic engineering ,TC1-978 ,Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,TA1-2040 - Abstract
Sufficient atomic power generation safety increase may be done with microfuel adapting to reactor plants with water coolant. Microfuel particle is a millimeter size grain containing fission material core in a protecting coverage. The coverage protects fuel contact with coolant and provides isolation of fission products inside. Well thermophysical properties of microfuel bed in a direct contact with water coolant excludes fuel overheating when accidents. Microfuel use was suggested for a VVER, а direct flow reactor for superheat steam generation, a reactor with neutron spectra adjustment by the steam partial content varying in the coolant.Nonuniformities of two-phase coolant distribution in a heat generating particles bed are predicted by calculations in this text. The one is due to multiple-valuedness of pressure drop across the bed on the steam quality dependency. The nonuniformity decreases with flow rate and particle size growths absolute pressure diminishing while porosity effect is weak. The worse case is for pressure quality of order of one. Some pure steam filled pores appears parallel to steam water mixture filled pores, latter steam quality is less than the mean of the bed. Considering this regime for the direct flow reactor for superheat steam generation we predict some water drops at the exit flow. The two-phase coolant filtration with subcooled water feed is unstable to strong disturbance effects are found. Uniformity of two-phase coolant distribution is worse than for one-phase in the same radial type reactor.
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- 2014
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32. Influence of dental fillings and tooth type on the performance of a novel artificial intelligence-driven tool for automatic tooth segmentation on CBCT images – A validation study
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Rocharles Cavalcante Fontenele, Maurício do Nascimento Gerhardt, Jáder Camilo Pinto, Adriaan Van Gerven, Holger Willems, Reinhilde Jacobs, Deborah Queiroz Freitas, Faculty of Medicine, Universidade Estadual de Campinas (UNICAMP), Pontifical Catholic University of Rio Grande do Sul, Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP), Innovatie-en incubatiecentrum KU Leuven, University Hospitals Leuven, and Karolinska Institute
- Subjects
Artificial intelligence ,Artificial Intelligence ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Cone-beam computed tomography ,Convolutional neural network ,Neural Networks, Computer ,Spiral Cone-Beam Computed Tomography ,Cone-Beam Computed Tomography ,General Dentistry ,Fillings ,Tooth - Abstract
Made available in DSpace on 2022-04-28T19:51:46Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 0 Previous issue date: 2022-04-01 Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES) Objectives: To assess the influence of dental fillings on the performance of an artificial intelligence (AI)-driven tool for tooth segmentation on cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) according to the type of tooth. Methods: A total of 175 CBCT scans (500 teeth) were recruited for performing training (140 CBCT scans - 400 teeth) and validation (35 CBCT scans - 100 teeth) of the AI convolutional neural networks. The test dataset involved 74 CBCT scans (226 teeth), which was further divided into control and experimental groups depending on the presence of dental filling: without filling (control group: 24 CBCT scans – 113 teeth) and with coronal and/or root filling (experimental group: 50 CBCT scans – 113 teeth). The segmentation performance for both groups was assessed. Additionally, 10% of each tooth type (anterior, premolar, and molar) was randomly selected for time analysis according to manual, AI-based and refined-AI segmentation methods. Results: The presence of fillings significantly influenced the segmentation performance (p
- Published
- 2022
33. Kompaksiyon Yönteminin Farklı Tip Geri Dönüştürülmüş Agregalar Üzerindeki Etkilerinin İncelenmesi
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OK, Bahadır and ÇOLAKOĞLU, Hüseyin
- Subjects
İnşaat ve yıkıntı atıkları ,Kompaksiyon yöntemi ,Atık agregalar ,Sürdürülebilirlik ,Geri dönüşüm ,Dolgular ,Construction and demolition wastes ,Compaction method ,Waste aggregates ,Sustainability ,Recycling ,Fillings ,İnşaat Mühendisliği ,Civil Engineering - Abstract
In recent years, the recycling and reuse of construction and demolition wastes have become increasingly important due to environmental concerns and economic reasons. In this study, the effect of the compaction method on the compaction of different construction and demolition wastes in order to build a filling was investigated. Accordingly, firstly, five different debris wastes were converted into granular filling material and their physical properties such as water absorption were determined by laboratory tests. After that, compaction tests were carried out on these waste aggregates using separately falling hammers and vibrating hammers. Besides, sieve analyzes were conducted before and after the compaction tests, and so the disintegration of the particles according to the compaction method was investigated. These tests were performed on a type of natural aggregate to compare waste aggregates. As a result of the study, it was observed that the water absorption values of the waste aggregates were greater than the limit values, and also the brick-based waste aggregates were caused to more increase water absorption value. It was also put forward due to the fact that compacting the waste aggregates with vibratory rammers will be beneficial as it will reduce the degradation of the particles., Son yıllarda inşaat ve yıkıntı atıklarının dönüştürülerek tekrar kullanılması, çevresel kaygılar ve ekonomik sebeplerden dolayı artarak önem kazanmıştır. Bu çalışmada farklı inşaat ve yıkıntı atıklarından dolgu inşa edebilmek için sıkıştırılmasında kompaksiyon yönteminin etkisi araştırılmıştır. Bu doğrultuda önce beş farklı yıkıntı atığı dönüştürülerek granüler dolgu malzemesi haline getirilmiş ve su emme gibi fiziksel özellikleri belirlenmiştir. Daha sonra bu atık agregalar üzerinde ayrı ayrı düşen tokmak ve titreşimli tokmak kullanarak kompaksiyon deneyleri gerçekleştirilmiştir. Ayrıca kompaksiyon deneyleri öncesi ve sonrası elek analizleri ile danelerin kompaksiyon yöntemine göre parçalanma durumları araştırılmıştır. Bu deneyler atık agregaları kıyaslama amacı ile bir çeşit doğal agrega üzerinde yürütülmüştür. Çalışma sonucunda atık agregaların su emmelerinin limit değerlerden yüksek olduğu ve tuğla bazlı atık agregaların su emme değerlerini daha da yükselttiği görülmüştür. Ayrıca atık agregaların titreşimli tokmaklarla sıkıştırılmasının danelerin parçalanmasını azaltacağından faydalı olacağı öne sürülmektedir.
- Published
- 2022
34. Avoiding Monotone Chains in Fillings of Layer Polyominoes.
- Author
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Phillipson, Mitch and Yan, Catherine
- Subjects
- *
MONOTONE operators , *POLYOMINOES , *BIJECTIONS , *CATALAN numbers , *FINITE element method , *CONVEX geometry - Abstract
In this paper we give simple bijective proofs that the number of fillings of layer polyominoes with no northeast chains is the same as the number with no southeast chains. We consider 01-fillings and $${{\mathbb{N}}}$$ -fillings and prove the results for both strong chains where the smallest rectangle containing the chain is also in the polyomino, and for regular chains where only the corners of the smallest rectangle containing the chain are required to be in the polyomino. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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35. First review of lyncodontini material (Mustelidae, Carnivora, Mammalia) from the lower pleistocene archaeo-palaeontological sites of orce (Southeastern Spain)
- Author
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Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Ros-Montoya S; Bartolini-Lucenti S; Espigares MP; Palmqvist P; Martínez-Navarro B, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, and Ros-Montoya S; Bartolini-Lucenti S; Espigares MP; Palmqvist P; Martínez-Navarro B
- Abstract
Two archaeo-palaeontological lower Pleistocene sites of orce (Baza Basin, Se Spain), Fuente nueva 3 (1.3 Ma) and Barranco león (1.4 Ma), preserve some of the earliest evidences of human presence in the european continent. During the 2013 field season, a small Lyncodontini mustelid mandible was found at Fuente Nueva-3. This finding was accompanied by a lower canine (c1), also from the same site, and a lower fourth premolar (p4) from Barranco león. Here, we report on the morphological and biometrical study of these materials, in comparison to other Eurasian Pliocene-Pleistocene species of the tribe Lyncodontini. The analyses revealed an affinity between the taxon from Fuente nueva-3 and Barranco león with the small-sized european species Martellictis ardea (gervais, 1848-1852), allowing us to ascribe the described material to the latter species. the presence of M. ardea in the sites of orce is the southernmost occurrence of the species in the Iberian Peninsula and an important finding in the scarce fossil record of lyncodontini in europe.
- Published
- 2021
36. Relative share, frequency and correlation of restorations in both dental dentitions in childhood
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Dobrinka Damyanova and Radosveta Andreeva-Borisova
- Subjects
Public health ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Health (social science) ,DMF index ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,DMFT Index ,Dental health ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Dentistry ,Age limit ,Correlation ,stomatognathic diseases ,stomatognathic system ,Restoration ,Correlation analysis ,Dental caries ,Medicine ,Simple linear regression ,business ,Fillings ,Permanent teeth - Abstract
This research aimed to analyze of the relative share, frequency and correlation of restorations in both dental dentitions in childhood. The decayed, missing, and filled permanent teeth (DMFT) index is one of the most commonly used indices in epidemiologic surveys of dental caries. It quantifies dental health status based on the number of carious, missing and filled teeth. A total of 602 schoolchildren in Varna, aged 3-18 years were selected for this study. The children have a determined high caries risk DMFT index >1. The patients are divided into 16 groups according to age limit. The research takes place in the Faculty of Dental Medicine, Medical University of Varna, in the time period 2016-2018. This study is retrospective, based on medical data of the participants. Pearson's correlation and simple linear regression were used to estimate the correlation between restorations, DMF (T+t) and age. The average value of determining the level of caries of the examined groups of children is DMF (T+t) =5.46±3.95 (range 0-20). With the correlation analysis we proved a direct dependence of the ratio. The number of preventive fillings with photopolymers and composites increased with increasing age of the studied children (r=0.725; p
- Published
- 2021
37. ЧАРМНИ ОШЛАШДА МАҲАЛЛИЙ СУВДА ЭРУВЧАН ФАОЛ СИНТЕТИК ПОЛИМЕРЛАРНИ ҚЎЛЛАШ
- Subjects
tanning ,дубление ,кожа ,сувда эрувчан полимерлар ,hydrolyzed polycrylonitrile ,гидролизованный поликрилонитрил ,водорастворимые полимеры ,polymer composition ,полимер композицияси ,гидролизланган полиакрилонитрил ,полимерная композиция ,ошлаш ,тўлдириш ,leather ,чарм ,water-soluble polymers ,fillings ,наполнения - Abstract
Мақолада чармни ошлаш учун сувда эрувчан фаол синтетик ошловчилар сифатида пойабзалнинг остки ва устки қисми учун чарм ишлаб чиқаришнинг ошловчи композициялар таркибида маҳаллий иккиламчи маҳсулот бўлган гидролизланган полиакрилонитрилнинг К-4 полимер препаратини қўлланилиши келтирилган., The article describes the use of a polymer preparation K-4 of hydrolyzed polyacrylonitrile, local and secondary raw materials, as a water-soluble active synthetic tanning agent in the composition for the leathers of the upper and lower shoes.
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- 2021
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38. THE FREQUENCY OF USE OF DENTAL AMALGAM IN PEDIATRIC DENTAL CLINICS IN JORDAN.
- Author
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GHOZLAN, MOA'TH, SHIBLY, ALI, HAMMOURI, EMAN, SMADI, HASAN, and RAHAMNEH, ANWAR
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DENTAL amalgams ,DENTISTRY ,ANESTHESIA ,DENTAL fillings - Abstract
The aim of the study was to assess the frequency of the use of dental amalgam fillings in pediatric dental clinics in Jordan. Retrospective file data for 500 Pediatric dental patients visiting Pediatric Dental Clinic in Prince Hashem Bin Abdullah in Aqaba in the South of Jordan in 2017 for routine dental visits, were collected. The types of dental fillings used were recorded. The patients had 865 different dental fillings in their teeth. Dental amalgam fillings formed 126/865 (15%) of the total fillings. Dental amalgam fillings are still used frequently in Pediatric Dental practice in Jordan. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
39. Finite Element Analysis in Setting of Fillings of V-Shaped Tooth Defects Made with Glass-Ionomer Cement and Flowable Composite
- Author
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Tihomir Vasilev, Vesela Hristova, Tsanka Dikova, and Vladimir Panov
- Subjects
Materials science ,Composite number ,Glass ionomer cement ,Bioengineering ,02 engineering and technology ,lcsh:Chemical technology ,lcsh:Chemistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,0203 mechanical engineering ,Flowable Composite ,Chemical Engineering (miscellaneous) ,von Mises yield criterion ,lcsh:TP1-1185 ,Composite material ,fillings ,FEA ,Process Chemistry and Technology ,flowable composite ,030206 dentistry ,Finite element method ,V-shaped tooth defects ,020303 mechanical engineering & transports ,lcsh:QD1-999 ,glass-ionomer cement ,Adhesive ,Deformation (engineering) ,Cavity wall - Abstract
The aim of the present paper is to investigate the deformation&ndash, stress state of fillings of V-shaped tooth defects by finite element analysis (FEA). Two different materials are used&mdash, auto-cured resin-reinforced glass-ionomer cement (GIC) and flowable photo-cured composite (FPC). Two materials are placed into the cavity in one portion, as before the application of the composite the cavity walls are covered with a thin adhesive layer. Deformations and equivalent von Mises stresses are evaluated by FEA. Experimental study of micro-leakage is performed. It is established that there is an analogous non-homogeneous distribution of equivalent Von Mises stresses at fillings of V-shaped defects, made with GIC and FPC. Maximum stresses are generated along the boundaries of the filling on the vestibular surface of the tooth and at the bottom of the filling itself. Values of equivalent Von Mises stresses of GIC fillings are higher than that of FPC. Magnitude and character of deformation distribution at GIC and FPC fillings are similar&mdash, deformation is maximum along the vestibular surface of the filling and is 0.056 and 0.053 mm, respectively. In FPC fillings, the adhesive layer, located along the cavity/filling boundary, is characterized with greatest strain. The experimental study of micro-leakage has confirmed the adequacy of models used in FEA.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. The FiCTION dental trial protocol - filling children's teeth: indicated or not?
- Author
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Innes, Nicola P. T., Clarkson, Jan E., Speed, Chris, Douglas, Gail V. A., and Maguire, Anne
- Subjects
CAVITY prevention ,COST effectiveness ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,DENTAL fillings ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,PEDIATRIC dentistry ,RESEARCH ,DISEASE management ,DECIDUOUS dentition (Tooth development) - Abstract
Background: There is a lack of evidence for effective management of dental caries (decay) in children's primary (baby) teeth and an apparent failure of conventional dental restorations (fillings) to prevent dental pain and infection for UK children in Primary Care. UK dental schools' teaching has been based on British Society of Paediatric Dentistry guidance which recommends that caries in primary teeth should be removed and a restoration placed. However, the evidence base for this is limited in volume and quality, and comes from studies conducted in either secondary care or specialist practices. Restorations provided in specialist environments can be effective but the generalisability of this evidence to Primary Care has been questioned. The FiCTION trial addresses the Health Technology Assessment (HTA) Programme's commissioning brief and research question "What is the clinical and cost effectiveness of restoration caries in primary teeth, compared to no treatment?" It compares conventional restorations with an intermediate treatment strategy based on the biological (sealing-in) management of caries and with no restorations. Methods/Design: This is a Primary Care-based multi-centre, three-arm, parallel group, patient-randomised controlled trial. Practitioners are recruiting 1461 children, (3-7 years) with at least one primary molar tooth where caries extends into dentine. Children are randomized and treated according to one of three treatment approaches; conventional caries management with best practice prevention, biological management of caries with best practice prevention or best practice prevention alone. Baseline measures and outcome data (at review/treatment during three year follow-up) are assessed through direct reporting, clinical examination including blinded radiograph assessment, and child/parent questionnaires. The primary outcome measure is the incidence of either pain or infection related to dental caries. Secondary outcomes are; incidence of caries in primary and permanent teeth, patient quality of life, cost-effectiveness, acceptability of treatment strategies to patients and parents and their experiences, and dentists' preferences. Discussion: FiCTION will provide evidence for the most clinically-effective and cost-effective approach to managing caries in children's primary teeth in Primary Care. This will support general dental practitioners in treatment decision making for child patients to minimize pain and infection in primary teeth. The trial is currently recruiting patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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41. Treatment experience, frequency of dental visits, and children's dental fear: a cognitive approach.
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Carrillo‐Diaz, Maria, Crego, Antonio, Armfield, Jason M., and Romero‐Maroto, Martin
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- *
ANXIETY diagnosis , *ACADEMIC medical centers , *COGNITION , *DENTAL care , *DENTISTRY , *FEAR , *SCALES (Weighing instruments) , *DENTAL pathology , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Carrillo-Diaz M, Crego A, Armfield JM, Romero-Maroto M. Treatment experience, frequency of dental visits, and children's dental fear: a cognitive approach. Eur J Oral Sci 2012; 120: 75-81. © 2012 Eur J Oral Sci Cognitive elements play a key role in dental anxiety. Nevertheless, relatively little is known about how dental treatments and frequency of visits to the dentist are related to dental fear and its cognitive antecedents. This study aimed to explore the relationships between dental visits, past treatment experiences, expectations on the aversiveness/probability of negative dental events, and dental fear in children. The participants were 147 children (60% female; mean age = 12.0 yr) who completed a questionnaire comprising measures of dental treatment-related experience (attendance, fillings, and extractions), perceived aversiveness and probability of dental events, and dental anxiety. Bivariate correlations and multiple linear regression analyses were used to analyze the data. A higher frequency of dental visits was associated with less dental fear and a decreased belief in the probability of negative events occurring during treatment. The type of treatments received was not directly linked to dental fear. However, having received fillings was significantly associated with the perceived probability of negative dental events, whereas extractions were positively associated with these expectations but negatively associated with the perceived aversiveness of possible dental events. Regular dental visits, as well as dental treatments, can influence, in different ways, cognitive elements associated with dental anxiety in children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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42. Bijections between pattern-avoiding fillings of Young diagrams
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Josuat-Vergès, Matthieu
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- *
YOUNG tableaux , *GRASSMANN manifolds , *PERMUTATIONS , *BIPARTITE graphs , *POINT mappings (Mathematics) , *POLYOMINOES , *MATHEMATICAL analysis - Abstract
Abstract: The pattern-avoiding fillings of Young diagrams we study arose from Postnikov''s work on positive Grassmann cells. They are called ▪-diagrams, and are in bijection with decorated permutations. Other closely-related fillings are interpreted as acyclic orientations of some bipartite graphs. The definition of the diagrams is the same but the avoided patterns are different. We give here bijections proving that the number of pattern-avoiding filling of a Young diagram is the same, for these two different sets of patterns. The result was obtained by Postnikov via a recurrence relation. This relation was extended by Spiridonov to obtain more general results about other patterns and other polyominoes than Young diagrams, and we show that our bijections also extend to more general polyominoes. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2010
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43. Best-practice prevention alone or with conventional or biological caries management for 3- to 7-year-olds: the FiCTION three-arm RCT
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Elaine McColl, Nicola Innes, Nina Wilson, Mark Robertson, Anne Maguire, Vicky Ryan, Alaa Abouhajar, Zoe Marshman, Gail Douglas, Luke Vale, Jan E Clarkson, Barbara Lesley Chadwick, Ruth Freeman, Ferranti S. L. Wong, Richard D. Holmes, Tara Homer, and Chris Deery
- Subjects
Male ,Pit and Fissure Sealants ,Toothbrushing ,medicine.medical_specialty ,restoration ,lcsh:Medical technology ,Cost effectiveness ,Dental Caries Susceptibility ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Pain ,Rate ratio ,law.invention ,paediatric dentistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,primary care ,0302 clinical medicine ,caries prevention ,Randomized controlled trial ,Quality of life ,stomatognathic system ,prevention ,law ,Interquartile range ,Internal medicine ,dental anxiety ,medicine ,Humans ,Fluorides, Topical ,030212 general & internal medicine ,fillings ,Child ,cost-effectiveness ,tooth, deciduous ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Absolute risk reduction ,030206 dentistry ,Confidence interval ,United Kingdom ,stomatognathic diseases ,primary teeth ,quality of life ,lcsh:R855-855.5 ,Child, Preschool ,dental caries ,Female ,business ,Research Article - Abstract
BackgroundHistorically, lack of evidence for effective management of decay in primary teeth has caused uncertainty, but there is emerging evidence to support alternative strategies to conventional fillings, which are minimally invasive and prevention orientated.ObjectivesThe objectives were (1) to assess the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of three strategies for managing caries in primary teeth and (2) to assess quality of life, dental anxiety, the acceptability and experiences of children, parents and dental professionals, and caries development and/or progression.DesignThis was a multicentre, three-arm parallel-group, participant-randomised controlled trial. Allocation concealment was achieved by use of a centralised web-based randomisation facility hosted by Newcastle Clinical Trials Unit.SettingThis trial was set in primary dental care in Scotland, England and Wales.ParticipantsParticipants were NHS patients aged 3–7 years who were at a high risk of tooth decay and had at least one primary molar tooth with decay into dentine, but no pain/sepsis.InterventionsThree interventions were employed: (1) conventional with best-practice prevention (local anaesthetic, carious tissue removal, filling placement), (2) biological with best-practice prevention (sealing-in decay, selective carious tissue removal and fissure sealants) and (3) best-practice prevention alone (dietary and toothbrushing advice, topical fluoride and fissure sealing of permanent teeth).Main outcome measuresThe clinical effectiveness outcomes were the proportion of children with at least one episode (incidence) and the number of episodes, for each child, of dental pain or dental sepsis or both over the follow-up period. The cost-effectiveness outcomes were the cost per incidence of, and cost per episode of, dental pain and/or dental sepsis avoided over the follow-up period.ResultsA total of 72 dental practices were recruited and 1144 participants were randomised (conventional arm,n = 386; biological arm,n = 381; prevention alone arm,n = 377). Of these, 1058 were included in an intention-to-treat analysis (conventional arm,n = 352; biological arm,n = 352; prevention alone arm,n = 354). The median follow-up time was 33.8 months (interquartile range 23.8–36.7 months). The proportion of children with at least one episode of pain or sepsis or both was 42% (conventional arm), 40% (biological arm) and 45% (prevention alone arm). There was no evidence of a difference in incidence or episodes of pain/sepsis between arms. When comparing the biological arm with the conventional arm, the risk difference was –0.02 (97.5% confidence interval –0.10 to 0.06), which indicates, on average, a 2% reduced risk of dental pain and/or dental sepsis in the biological arm compared with the conventional arm. Comparing the prevention alone arm with the conventional arm, the risk difference was 0.04 (97.5% confidence interval –0.04 to 0.12), which indicates, on average, a 4% increased risk of dental pain and/or dental sepsis in the prevention alone arm compared with the conventional arm. Compared with the conventional arm, there was no evidence of a difference in episodes of pain/sepsis among children in the biological arm (incident rate ratio 0.95, 97.5% confidence interval 0.75 to 1.21, which indicates that there were slightly fewer episodes, on average, in the biological arm than the conventional arm) or in the prevention alone arm (incident rate ratio 1.18, 97.5% confidence interval 0.94 to 1.48, which indicates that there were slightly more episodes in the prevention alone arm than the conventional arm). Over the willingness-to-pay values considered, the probability of the biological treatment approach being considered cost-effective was approximately no higher than 60% to avoid an incidence of dental pain and/or dental sepsis and no higher than 70% to avoid an episode of pain/sepsis.ConclusionsThere was no evidence of an overall difference between the three treatment approaches for experience of, or number of episodes of, dental pain or dental sepsis or both over the follow-up period.Future workRecommendations for future work include exploring barriers to the use of conventional techniques for carious lesion detection and diagnosis (e.g. radiographs) and developing and evaluating suitable techniques and strategies for use in young children in primary care.Trial registrationCurrent Controlled Trials ISRCTN77044005.FundingThis project was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment programme and will be published in full inHealth Technology Assessment; Vol. 24, No. 1. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.
- Published
- 2020
44. Selection of the Optimal Window Type and Orientation for the Two Cities in Serbia and One in Slovakia.
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Djoković, Jelena M., Nikolić, Ružica R., Bujnak, Jan, Hadzima, Branislav, Pastorek, Filip, Dwornicka, Renata, and Ulewicz, Robert
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CLIMATIC classification ,FILLER materials ,HEAT conduction ,SOLAR radiation ,FACTOR analysis - Abstract
The necessity of having windows on any building's façade is not questionable. However, not every window is suitable for any building. The selection of an adequate window must include the analysis of various factors—the most important ones are the type of window (e.g., single or double glazing); filling gas in cavities (e.g., air, argon or some other gas); and placing, i.e., orientation of a window on a façade (facing north, south, or east, etc.). The research presented in this paper is dealing with the calculation of the window thermal loading for the cities of Kragujevac and Bor in Serbia and Žilina in Slovakia. These three cities were selected because they belong to different climate regions, according to the Köppen–Geiger climatic classification. The first two cities in Serbia belong to the same region Cf with difference only in the category of summer—Kragujevac Cfa and Bor Cfb—while the third city—Žilina in Slovakia—belongs to the Dfb region. The calculated thermal loading through the window was obtained as a sum of the thermal loading due to the heat conduction and thermal loading due to the solar radiation. The objective was to find the optimal window construction and orientation of a building's façade for each of these cities, by varying the type of the window, its frame material and the filling gas. The results show that for the first two cities in Serbia, there is a difference in the window frame material in the optimal window construction, while for the third city (Žilina in Slovakia), the results are the same as for the second city (Bor in Serbia) despite the fact that they belong to different climate regions (Cfb and Dfb, respectively). These results support the fact that the climate affects the optimal window construction for any city/region in the world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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45. Influence of dental fillings and tooth type on the performance of a novel artificial intelligence-driven tool for automatic tooth segmentation on CBCT images - A validation study.
- Author
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Fontenele RC, Gerhardt MDN, Pinto JC, Van Gerven A, Willems H, Jacobs R, and Freitas DQ
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- Artificial Intelligence, Cone-Beam Computed Tomography methods, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Neural Networks, Computer, Spiral Cone-Beam Computed Tomography, Tooth
- Abstract
Objectives: To assess the influence of dental fillings on the performance of an artificial intelligence (AI)-driven tool for tooth segmentation on cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) according to the type of tooth., Methods: A total of 175 CBCT scans (500 teeth) were recruited for performing training (140 CBCT scans - 400 teeth) and validation (35 CBCT scans - 100 teeth) of the AI convolutional neural networks. The test dataset involved 74 CBCT scans (226 teeth), which was further divided into control and experimental groups depending on the presence of dental filling: without filling (control group: 24 CBCT scans - 113 teeth) and with coronal and/or root filling (experimental group: 50 CBCT scans - 113 teeth). The segmentation performance for both groups was assessed. Additionally, 10% of each tooth type (anterior, premolar, and molar) was randomly selected for time analysis according to manual, AI-based and refined-AI segmentation methods., Results: The presence of fillings significantly influenced the segmentation performance (p<0.05). However, the accuracy metrics showed an excellent range of values for both control (95% Hausdorff Distance (95% HD): 0.01-0.08 mm; Intersection over union (IoU): 0.97-0.99; Dice similarity coefficient (DSC): 0.98-0.99; Precision: 1.00; Recall: 0.97-0.99; Accuracy: 1.00) and experimental groups (95% HD: 0.17-0.25 mm; IoU: 0.91-0.95; DSC: 0.95-0.97; Precision:1.00; Recall: 0.91-0.95; Accuracy: 0.99-1.00). The time analysis showed that the AI-based segmentation was significantly faster with a mean time of 29.8 s (p<0.001)., Conclusions: The proposed AI-driven tool allowed an accurate and time-efficient approach for the segmentation of teeth on CBCT images irrespective of the presence of high-density dental filling material and the type of tooth., Clinical Significance: Tooth segmentation is a challenging and time-consuming task, mainly in the presence of artifacts generated by dental filling material. The proposed AI-driven tool could offer a clinically acceptable approach for tooth segmentation, to be applied in the digital dental workflows considering its time efficiency and high accuracy regardless of the presence of dental fillings., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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46. Indications for root canal treatment in a Swedish county dental service:patient- and tooth-specific characteristics
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Wigsten, E., Jonasson, P., Bjorndal, L., Dawson, V. S., Fransson, H., Frisk, F., Markvart, M., Pigg, M., Wolf, E., Kvist, T., Wigsten, E., Jonasson, P., Bjorndal, L., Dawson, V. S., Fransson, H., Frisk, F., Markvart, M., Pigg, M., Wolf, E., and Kvist, T.
- Abstract
AimTo study patient- and tooth-specific characteristics of teeth indicated for root canal treatment, in the public dental service of the county of Vastra Gotaland, Sweden.MethodologyDuring a designated 8-week period, general dental practitioners working at 20 different public dental clinics consecutively registered indications for undertaking root canal treatment. The patients' subjective level of pain was also registered (visual analogue scale) at the very first appointment. The following information was retrieved from computerized dental records and radiographs: gender, age, number of remaining teeth, tooth group, previous restoration, number of restored surfaces, dental caries and tooth substance loss. Gender and age were compared using both descriptive and analytical statistics.ResultsThe material comprised 243 teeth in 243 patients: 128 (52.7%) women and 115 (47.3%) men, mean age 48.3years. Molar teeth predominated (47.7%). Most of the teeth (83.5%) had previously been restored and exhibited significant loss of tooth substance, more than a third of the crown (71.3%). Dental caries was present in 127 teeth (62.9%). Dental trauma was implicated in only seven cases (2.9%). Initial treatment was frequently undertaken at an emergency visit, for relief of symptoms (64.9%). The most commonly registered indication was pulpal necrosis with apical periodontitis (38.1%), followed by pulpitis (37.7%). Retreatment of a root filled tooth was reported in 18 teeth (7.4%).ConclusionsIn the general Public Dental Service of Sweden, root canal treatment is most frequently undertaken in molars. The primary indication is relief of symptoms. Retreatment of root filled teeth is uncommon.
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- 2019
47. In vivo comparison of a microfilled and a hybrid minifilled composite resin in class III restorations: 2-year follow-up.
- Author
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Reusens, B., D’hoore, W., and Vreven, J.
- Abstract
An in vivo comparison was made of two different types of restorative resins over a 2-year period: a microfilled resin ( -1158262462Silux Plus, 3M-1158262462, USA) and a hybrid minifilled composite resin (-1158262461Herculite XRV, Kerr-1158262461, USA); 56 restorations were placed in 28 patients by one experienced dentist and examined by two independent evaluators using the United States Public Health Service (UPSHS) rating system for marginal adaptation, marginal discoloration, surface roughness, anatomic form and modified criteria for color match (direct and indirect evaluation). Modified criteria divided the classic A score into A1 for ”not detectable” filling and A2 for ”slightly discernible filling”. Restorations were evaluated at baseline, 1 week, 6 months, 1 year and 2 years later. After 2 years, all materials were considered satisfactory for marginal adaptation, anatomic form and surface roughness (no ”Charlie”, or ”Delta” ratings). No recurrent caries was observed. Clinical evaluation showed a significantly higher rate of marginal discoloration for the microfilled composite resin than the other resin. Hybrid composite resin materials may be expected to perform well as an anterior restorative material. Photographic ratings confirmed the clinical evaluation. The modified evaluation for color match demonstrated differences, which are not discernible with the USPHS system and showed, more rapidly, differences that appear later with the USPHS system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
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48. Bond strength of porcelain on cast vs. wrought titanium.
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Dérand, Tore and Herø, Håkon
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- *
DENTAL materials , *DENTAL fillings , *OPERATIVE dentistry , *PORCELAIN , *TITANIUM , *TEETH - Abstract
The bond strength of porcelain fused to cast and wrought titanium surfaces was calculated from fracture loads in a 4-point bending test. Two different porcelain were applied (O'Hara and Duceratin). The surface of Ti-cast specimens was treated in two different ways to produce variations in the impurity level before porcelain veneering. Microhardness measurements as well as scanning electron microscopy with EDX analysis were conducted. The results showed no significant difference in bond strength between the two porcelains. Nor was any difference in bond capacity found between thoroughly blasted castings and wrought titanium. Significantly lower bond strengths were observed for lightly blasted specimens and for specimens treated with Gold bonding agent. Impurities in the surface region of the castings were found to be due to contact with the investment during solidification. This indicates that a thin surface layer (50-100 μm) of the casting should be removed before firing of the porcelain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 1992
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49. Marginal adaptation of a restorative resin polymerized at reduced rate.
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Uno, Shigeru and Asmussen, Erik
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DENTAL resins , *DENTAL materials , *DENTAL acrylic resins , *POLYMERIZATION , *DENTIN , *PIT & fissure sealants (Dentistry) - Abstract
The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of reduced rate of polymerization on the marginal adaptation of a composite resin inserted in dentin cavities treated with a simplified Gluma system. The effect on bonding strength to dentin and compressive strength was also investigated. The light intensity of the polymerization unit was lowered by the use of a transformer, and thus the rate of polymerization of the composite resin. When the resin was irradiated for 30 s at 110 V followed by 30 s at 220 V, the marginal adaptation was significantly improved. This condition resulted in acceptable values of bonding strength to dentin and diametral compressive strength. It is suggested that the reduced rate of polymerization may allow for increased flow of the material, decreasing the contraction stress in the filling. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1991
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50. Incidence and prediction of filled teeth from 12 to 18 years of age in a district in Norway.
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Ögaard, Bjørn and Rösler, Marek
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DENTISTRY , *PROSTHODONTICS , *DENTAL materials , *DENTAL fillings , *DENTAL chemistry , *MOLARS - Abstract
The present study investigated whether the incidence or prevalence of filled teeth/approximal surfaces at one age could be predictive for the incidence in another period or for the prevalence at the age of 18. The study was conducted in 12-18-yr-olds in Norway. Regression analysis showed that the best prognosis for subsequent incidence of filled teeth/approximal surfaces could be made at the age of 15. By using regression analysis or discriminant analysis it was possible at the age of 15 to predict with high accuracy those who would acquire more fillings than the median at the age of 18. Discriminant analysis with one predictor variable is suggested for clinical use. The variable that discriminated best between above arid below median number of new fillings in the period 15-18 yr was untreated lesions in the inner half of the enamel in the approximal surfaces of premolars and molars at the age of 15. From the use of simple prediction tools, it was concluded that individuals at the age of 15 with a low prevalence of filled teeth/filled approximal surfaces and without untreated approximal lesions would be subjected to a low incidence of new fillings until the age of 18. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1991
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