tooth decay / cavities / dental caries |
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| The formation of tooth decay ("cavities") can be a significant problem some individuals, either as children or adults. Tooth decay can, however, be prevented to a very great degree if a person just understands and practices a very few basic concepts.
Our pages will explain for you how tooth decay forms and what role dietary sugars and the bacteria found in dental plaque play in cavity formation. We'll also describe how, amazingly, fluoride actually helps to reverse the tooth damage caused by the decay process. Additionally, we'll explain how throughout a person's lifetime, from childhood up to the senior years, various factors can come into play which can put a person at greater risk for tooth decay, and we'll provide suggestions for minimizing these factors. |
What is tooth decay?In short, tooth decay is a location on a tooth where so much of the tooth's mineral content as been dissolved away that a defect (a hole or a "cavity") has developed.Now, let's back up a few steps and start a discussion about tooth decay so this blurb of a description makes more sense. Tooth anatomy as it relates to tooth decay.First off, you need to think of a tooth in terms of being a hard calcified object. Yes, teeth do have nerves in their centers and this tissue is soft, but the surface of a tooth (where tooth decay begins) is formed from types of tissues that are very high in mineral content. These tissues are called enamel and dentin. Our mock up of a dental x-ray shown to the right illustrates where the dentin and enamel aspects of a tooth are located. |
Tooth Decay, Cavities, & Dental Caries : |
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| Page 2 and more about tooth decay formation. >
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Synonymous terms for tooth decay.There are two terms that are commonly used to refer to tooth decay. The most common of these is the word "cavity", which no doubt simply refers to the hole which often forms as a result of the tooth decay process. Another term that can be used interchangeably with "tooth decay" is the word "caries". This is the term you will most frequently find used in dental literature. The word "caries" is derived from the Latin word for "rot", which seems to be a reasonably accurate description of the tooth decay process. |
Has tooth decay always been a problem for mankind?No doubt throughout the entire history of humankind there have always been at least some individuals who have suffered severely from the effects of tooth decay. Cavities first became pandemic (an epidemic spread over a wide geographic region) however with the establishment of sugar plantations in the 1700's in the "New World". Subsequently, tooth decay affected yet greater numbers of people with the widespread cultivation of the sugar beet in Europe in the 1800's. |