Tooth Wear and Erosion Flashcards

1
Q

Define tooth wear and dental erosion

A
  • Tooth wear: term used to describe the surface loss of dental hard tissue from causes other than caries, trauma or as a result of developmental disorders”
  • Dental erosion: Loss of hard tissue from the tooth surface by chemical means. The agent can be intrinsic or extrinsic
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2
Q

Understand that the causes behind tooth wear can be multifactorial

A
  • Attrition: tooth wear caused by tooth-to-tooth contact, resulting in loss of tooth tissue, usually starting at the incisal or occlusal surfaces
  • Erosion: the loss of tooth surface through chemical processes
  • Abrasion: progressive loss of hard tooth substances caused by mechanical actions other than mastication or tooth-to tooth contacts
  • Abfraction: the loss of hard tissues from eccentric occlusal loads leading tensile stresses on the cervical area of the tooth
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3
Q

Identify and describe the clinical signs and symptoms of tooth wear and dental erosion

A

Smooth satin appearance (bruxism produces very reflective highly polished flat facets)
• Absence of developmental ridges (Perikymata)
• Rounded teeth
• Increased translucency of incisal edge (may appear dark)
• Cupping or grooving of teeth - concave loss of tooth tissue
• Restorations seem separate of tooth tissue
• No staining of teeth

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4
Q

Identify the possible extrinsic causes of tooth wear and dental erosion

A

Environmental
• Battery factory workers
• Gas chlorinated pools
• Professional wine tasters

Lifestyle
• Unusual habits
• Ecstasy usage

Medications
• Suspensions
• Aspirin and Vitamin C
• Asthma medications

Dietary factors
• Acidic foods and drinks (they have pH of 2.1 - 4.6)

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5
Q

Identify the possible intrinsic causes of tooth wear and dental erosion

A

Vomiting and eating disorders
• Gastro-oesophageal reflux disease (GORD)
• Regurgitation and Gastro-intestinal Reflux (GIR)
• Rumination (regurgitation and re-chewing)

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6
Q

Identify the risk factors and consequences of dental erosion

A

Reflux disease
• Bulimia: self induced vomiting
• Soft drinks (low pH) and causes burping and gastro- oesophageal reflux disease if drinking before bed
• Obesity leads to gastro- oesophageal disease and erosion of teeth
• Asthma: Ventolin meds have very low pH and, asthma meds can make the oesophageal sphincter more relaxed = reflux disease
• Saliva hypofunction: dehydration/ caffeine addiction or medications like anticholinergics

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7
Q

Describe how you would record notes on an ‘at risk’ patient and how you would manage them

A

Management:
• Examine patients with tooth wear and grade the severity

  • Record it: intra oral photos, note size and places of lesions, tooth wear monitoring and tooth index
  • Determine causative factors: medical history (reflux disease, medicines), diet, saliva testing (amount, buffering capacity), time/ method of consuming acidic beverages
  • Prevention of tooth wear: educating patients about causes and consequences, provide fluoride, high fluoride toothpastes, tooth mouse, chewing gum, sodium bicarbonate mouthwash, diet counselling (drink during meals, eat cheese at the end of a meal, do not brush after eating), sealants, restorations, referrals to medical practitioners
  • Monitoring: 6- 12 monthly comparisons to previous moulds, radiographs, intraoral pictures
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8
Q

List the levels of the Smith and Knight tooth wear index

A

0: no loss of enamel
1: loss of enamel but minimal loss of contour cervically
2: exposed dentine
3: exposure of pulp or secondary dentine
4: complete loss of enamel with pulp exposure

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9
Q

List the goals of restoring tooth wear and dental erosions

A

Restore function and Oral Vertical Dimension (OVD)
• Maintain pulp vitality
• Reduce sensitivity
• Aesthetics

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10
Q

Explain the definitive management of erosion lesions with respect to the primary dentitions

A
Anterior teeth:
• Difficult because non retentive
○ GIC
○ Strip crowns
○ Composite usually performed by a specialist

Posterior teeth
○ Stainless Steel Crowns (SSC’s) (Hall technique)
○ GIC
○ Composite

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11
Q

Explain the definitive management of erosion lesions with respect to the permanent dentitions

A
  • GIC
    -Definitive restorations
    • Composite- direct or indirect
    • Porcelain
    • Veneers
    • Cast metal restorations
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12
Q

list the symptoms and sequelae associated with dentinal erosion

A

sympotoms=

  • sensitivity due to dentinal exposure
  • functional difficulties
  • poor aesthetics

sequelae =

  • infections
  • poor aesthetics
  • loss of oral vertical dimension
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13
Q

Describe why it is important to use the tooth wear index when describing the degree of wear

A
  • enables the communication between the dental professional and uniform understanding of the situation being described
  • enables the clinician to grasp the severity of wear and formulate treatments accordingly
  • serve as a record and used to monitor the patient’s progress
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14
Q

list factors that may affect the type of aesthetics treatment and materials used

A
  • age
  • tooth position in the arch
  • planned orthodontic treatment
  • patient decisions
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