The dynamic behavior of the early dental caries lesion in caries-active adults and implications

Objective To describe the full range of behavior of the visible, noncavitated, early caries lesion in caries‐active adults with substantial fluoride exposure, and to consider implications. Methods The data were from the Xylitol for Adult Caries Trial (X‐ACT) collected annually for 33 months using co...

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Published inCommunity dentistry and oral epidemiology Vol. 43; no. 3; pp. 208 - 216
Main Authors Brown, John P., Amaechi, Bennett T., Bader, James D., Shugars, Daniel, Vollmer, William M., Chen, Chuhe, Gilbert, Gregg H., Esterberg, Elisabeth J.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Denmark Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.06.2015
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text
ISSN0301-5661
1600-0528
1600-0528
DOI10.1111/cdoe.12143

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Abstract Objective To describe the full range of behavior of the visible, noncavitated, early caries lesion in caries‐active adults with substantial fluoride exposure, and to consider implications. Methods The data were from the Xylitol for Adult Caries Trial (X‐ACT) collected annually for 33 months using condensed ICDAS caries threshold criteria. Individual tooth surfaces having a noncavitated caries lesion were included, and the patterns of transition to each subsequent annual clinical examination to sound, noncavitated or cavitated, filled or crowned were determined. The resulting sets of patterns for an individual tooth surface, looking forward from its first appearance as a noncavitated lesion, were combined into one of four behavior profiles classified as reversing, stable, oscillating, or continuously progressing, or were excluded if not part of the caries continuum. The distributions of profile types were assessed using the Rao–Scott chi‐square test, which adjusts for clustering of tooth surfaces within teeth. Results Inter‐ and intra‐examiner kappa scores demonstrated acceptable calibration at baseline and annually. 8084 tooth surfaces from 543 subjects were included. The distribution of profile types differed significantly between coronal and root surfaces. Overall, two‐thirds of all coronal noncavitated lesions were first seen at baseline, half reversed, over a fifth were stable, 15% oscillated, and only 8.3% progressed to cavitation, filled, or crowned in 33 months or less (6.3% consistently Progressed plus 2.0% inconsistently, a subset of oscillating, which oscillated before progressing to cavitation). Approximal, smooth, and occlusal coronal surfaces each were significantly different in their individual distributions of profile types. Xylitol showed no significant and consistent effect on this distribution by tooth surface type. This was in keeping with the X‐ACT's lack of effect of xylitol at the noncavitated plus cavitated lesion thresholds combined. Conclusions This study demonstrated the full dynamic range of early caries lesion behavior. The great majority were not progressive, and few (8.3%) became cavitated over 33 months in caries‐active adults using fluorides. Important caries management implications favoring recorded longitudinal monitoring, prevention of active risks, and minimal restoration only after direct visual determination of cavitation are discussed.
AbstractList To describe the full range of behavior of the visible, noncavitated, early caries lesion in caries-active adults with substantial fluoride exposure, and to consider implications. The data were from the Xylitol for Adult Caries Trial (X-ACT) collected annually for 33 months using condensed ICDAS caries threshold criteria. Individual tooth surfaces having a noncavitated caries lesion were included, and the patterns of transition to each subsequent annual clinical examination to sound, noncavitated or cavitated, filled or crowned were determined. The resulting sets of patterns for an individual tooth surface, looking forward from its first appearance as a noncavitated lesion, were combined into one of four behavior profiles classified as reversing, stable, oscillating, or continuously progressing, or were excluded if not part of the caries continuum. The distributions of profile types were assessed using the Rao-Scott chi-square test, which adjusts for clustering of tooth surfaces within teeth. Inter- and intra-examiner kappa scores demonstrated acceptable calibration at baseline and annually. 8084 tooth surfaces from 543 subjects were included. The distribution of profile types differed significantly between coronal and root surfaces. Overall, two-thirds of all coronal noncavitated lesions were first seen at baseline, half reversed, over a fifth were stable, 15% oscillated, and only 8.3% progressed to cavitation, filled, or crowned in 33 months or less (6.3% consistently Progressed plus 2.0% inconsistently, a subset of oscillating, which oscillated before progressing to cavitation). Approximal, smooth, and occlusal coronal surfaces each were significantly different in their individual distributions of profile types. Xylitol showed no significant and consistent effect on this distribution by tooth surface type. This was in keeping with the X-ACT's lack of effect of xylitol at the noncavitated plus cavitated lesion thresholds combined. This study demonstrated the full dynamic range of early caries lesion behavior. The great majority were not progressive, and few (8.3%) became cavitated over 33 months in caries-active adults using fluorides. Important caries management implications favoring recorded longitudinal monitoring, prevention of active risks, and minimal restoration only after direct visual determination of cavitation are discussed.
Objective To describe the full range of behavior of the visible, noncavitated, early caries lesion in caries-active adults with substantial fluoride exposure, and to consider implications. Methods The data were from the Xylitol for Adult Caries Trial (X-ACT) collected annually for 33 months using condensed ICDAS caries threshold criteria. Individual tooth surfaces having a noncavitated caries lesion were included, and the patterns of transition to each subsequent annual clinical examination to sound, noncavitated or cavitated, filled or crowned were determined. The resulting sets of patterns for an individual tooth surface, looking forward from its first appearance as a noncavitated lesion, were combined into one of four behavior profiles classified as reversing, stable, oscillating, or continuously progressing, or were excluded if not part of the caries continuum. The distributions of profile types were assessed using the Rao-Scott chi-square test, which adjusts for clustering of tooth surfaces within teeth. Results Inter- and intra-examiner kappa scores demonstrated acceptable calibration at baseline and annually. 8084 tooth surfaces from 543 subjects were included. The distribution of profile types differed significantly between coronal and root surfaces. Overall, two-thirds of all coronal noncavitated lesions were first seen at baseline, half reversed, over a fifth were stable, 15% oscillated, and only 8.3% progressed to cavitation, filled, or crowned in 33 months or less (6.3% consistently Progressed plus 2.0% inconsistently, a subset of oscillating, which oscillated before progressing to cavitation). Approximal, smooth, and occlusal coronal surfaces each were significantly different in their individual distributions of profile types. Xylitol showed no significant and consistent effect on this distribution by tooth surface type. This was in keeping with the X-ACT's lack of effect of xylitol at the noncavitated plus cavitated lesion thresholds combined. Conclusions This study demonstrated the full dynamic range of early caries lesion behavior. The great majority were not progressive, and few (8.3%) became cavitated over 33 months in caries-active adults using fluorides. Important caries management implications favoring recorded longitudinal monitoring, prevention of active risks, and minimal restoration only after direct visual determination of cavitation are discussed.
To describe the full range of behavior of the visible, noncavitated, early caries lesion in caries-active adults with substantial fluoride exposure, and to consider implications. The data were from the Xylitol for Adult Caries Trial (X-ACT) collected annually for 33 months using condensed ICDAS caries threshold criteria. Individual tooth surfaces having a noncavitated caries lesion were included, and the patterns of transition to each subsequent annual clinical examination to sound, noncavitated or cavitated, filled or crowned were determined. The resulting sets of patterns for an individual tooth surface, looking forward from its first appearance as a noncavitated lesion, were combined into one of four behavior profiles classified as reversing, stable, oscillating, or continuously progressing, or were excluded if not part of the caries continuum. The distributions of profile types were assessed using the Rao-Scott chi-square test, which adjusts for clustering of tooth surfaces within teeth. Inter- and intra-examiner kappa scores demonstrated acceptable calibration at baseline and annually. 8084 tooth surfaces from 543 subjects were included. The distribution of profile types differed significantly between coronal and root surfaces. Overall, two-thirds of all coronal noncavitated lesions were first seen at baseline, half reversed, over a fifth were stable, 15% oscillated, and only 8.3% progressed to cavitation, filled, or crowned in 33 months or less (6.3% consistently Progressed plus 2.0% inconsistently, a subset of oscillating, which oscillated before progressing to cavitation). Approximal, smooth, and occlusal coronal surfaces each were significantly different in their individual distributions of profile types. Xylitol showed no significant and consistent effect on this distribution by tooth surface type. This was in keeping with the X-ACT's lack of effect of xylitol at the noncavitated plus cavitated lesion thresholds combined. This study demonstrated the full dynamic range of early caries lesion behavior. The great majority were not progressive, and few (8.3%) became cavitated over 33 months in caries-active adults using fluorides. Important caries management implications favoring recorded longitudinal monitoring, prevention of active risks, and minimal restoration only after direct visual determination of cavitation are discussed.
Objective To describe the full range of behavior of the visible, noncavitated, early caries lesion in caries‐active adults with substantial fluoride exposure, and to consider implications. Methods The data were from the Xylitol for Adult Caries Trial (X‐ACT) collected annually for 33 months using condensed ICDAS caries threshold criteria. Individual tooth surfaces having a noncavitated caries lesion were included, and the patterns of transition to each subsequent annual clinical examination to sound, noncavitated or cavitated, filled or crowned were determined. The resulting sets of patterns for an individual tooth surface, looking forward from its first appearance as a noncavitated lesion, were combined into one of four behavior profiles classified as reversing, stable, oscillating, or continuously progressing, or were excluded if not part of the caries continuum. The distributions of profile types were assessed using the Rao–Scott chi‐square test, which adjusts for clustering of tooth surfaces within teeth. Results Inter‐ and intra‐examiner kappa scores demonstrated acceptable calibration at baseline and annually. 8084 tooth surfaces from 543 subjects were included. The distribution of profile types differed significantly between coronal and root surfaces. Overall, two‐thirds of all coronal noncavitated lesions were first seen at baseline, half reversed, over a fifth were stable, 15% oscillated, and only 8.3% progressed to cavitation, filled, or crowned in 33 months or less (6.3% consistently Progressed plus 2.0% inconsistently, a subset of oscillating, which oscillated before progressing to cavitation). Approximal, smooth, and occlusal coronal surfaces each were significantly different in their individual distributions of profile types. Xylitol showed no significant and consistent effect on this distribution by tooth surface type. This was in keeping with the X‐ACT's lack of effect of xylitol at the noncavitated plus cavitated lesion thresholds combined. Conclusions This study demonstrated the full dynamic range of early caries lesion behavior. The great majority were not progressive, and few (8.3%) became cavitated over 33 months in caries‐active adults using fluorides. Important caries management implications favoring recorded longitudinal monitoring, prevention of active risks, and minimal restoration only after direct visual determination of cavitation are discussed.
To describe the full range of behavior of the visible, noncavitated, early caries lesion in caries-active adults with substantial fluoride exposure, and to consider implications.OBJECTIVETo describe the full range of behavior of the visible, noncavitated, early caries lesion in caries-active adults with substantial fluoride exposure, and to consider implications.The data were from the Xylitol for Adult Caries Trial (X-ACT) collected annually for 33 months using condensed ICDAS caries threshold criteria. Individual tooth surfaces having a noncavitated caries lesion were included, and the patterns of transition to each subsequent annual clinical examination to sound, noncavitated or cavitated, filled or crowned were determined. The resulting sets of patterns for an individual tooth surface, looking forward from its first appearance as a noncavitated lesion, were combined into one of four behavior profiles classified as reversing, stable, oscillating, or continuously progressing, or were excluded if not part of the caries continuum. The distributions of profile types were assessed using the Rao-Scott chi-square test, which adjusts for clustering of tooth surfaces within teeth.METHODSThe data were from the Xylitol for Adult Caries Trial (X-ACT) collected annually for 33 months using condensed ICDAS caries threshold criteria. Individual tooth surfaces having a noncavitated caries lesion were included, and the patterns of transition to each subsequent annual clinical examination to sound, noncavitated or cavitated, filled or crowned were determined. The resulting sets of patterns for an individual tooth surface, looking forward from its first appearance as a noncavitated lesion, were combined into one of four behavior profiles classified as reversing, stable, oscillating, or continuously progressing, or were excluded if not part of the caries continuum. The distributions of profile types were assessed using the Rao-Scott chi-square test, which adjusts for clustering of tooth surfaces within teeth.Inter- and intra-examiner kappa scores demonstrated acceptable calibration at baseline and annually. 8084 tooth surfaces from 543 subjects were included. The distribution of profile types differed significantly between coronal and root surfaces. Overall, two-thirds of all coronal noncavitated lesions were first seen at baseline, half reversed, over a fifth were stable, 15% oscillated, and only 8.3% progressed to cavitation, filled, or crowned in 33 months or less (6.3% consistently Progressed plus 2.0% inconsistently, a subset of oscillating, which oscillated before progressing to cavitation). Approximal, smooth, and occlusal coronal surfaces each were significantly different in their individual distributions of profile types. Xylitol showed no significant and consistent effect on this distribution by tooth surface type. This was in keeping with the X-ACT's lack of effect of xylitol at the noncavitated plus cavitated lesion thresholds combined.RESULTSInter- and intra-examiner kappa scores demonstrated acceptable calibration at baseline and annually. 8084 tooth surfaces from 543 subjects were included. The distribution of profile types differed significantly between coronal and root surfaces. Overall, two-thirds of all coronal noncavitated lesions were first seen at baseline, half reversed, over a fifth were stable, 15% oscillated, and only 8.3% progressed to cavitation, filled, or crowned in 33 months or less (6.3% consistently Progressed plus 2.0% inconsistently, a subset of oscillating, which oscillated before progressing to cavitation). Approximal, smooth, and occlusal coronal surfaces each were significantly different in their individual distributions of profile types. Xylitol showed no significant and consistent effect on this distribution by tooth surface type. This was in keeping with the X-ACT's lack of effect of xylitol at the noncavitated plus cavitated lesion thresholds combined.This study demonstrated the full dynamic range of early caries lesion behavior. The great majority were not progressive, and few (8.3%) became cavitated over 33 months in caries-active adults using fluorides. Important caries management implications favoring recorded longitudinal monitoring, prevention of active risks, and minimal restoration only after direct visual determination of cavitation are discussed.CONCLUSIONSThis study demonstrated the full dynamic range of early caries lesion behavior. The great majority were not progressive, and few (8.3%) became cavitated over 33 months in caries-active adults using fluorides. Important caries management implications favoring recorded longitudinal monitoring, prevention of active risks, and minimal restoration only after direct visual determination of cavitation are discussed.
Author Bader, James D.
Vollmer, William M.
Esterberg, Elisabeth J.
Amaechi, Bennett T.
Chen, Chuhe
Gilbert, Gregg H.
Brown, John P.
Shugars, Daniel
AuthorAffiliation 3 Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research, Portland OR 97227
2 School of Dentistry, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill NC 27599
4 School of Dentistry, University of Alabama at Birmingham AL 35294
1 Dental School, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio TX 78229
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Keywords clinical decision making
fluoride
early caries lesion
cariology
adults
caries
Language English
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2015 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
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References Pitts NB. Monitoring of caries progression in permanent and primary posterior approximal enamel by bitewing radiography. Community Dent Oral Epidemiol 1983;11:228-35.
Hintze H. Caries behaviour in Danish teenagers: a longitudinal radiographic study. Int J Paediatr Dent 1997;7:227-34.
Pot TJ, Groenveld A, Purdell-Lewis DJ. The origin and behavior of white spot enamel lesions. Ned Tijdschr Tandheelkd 1977;85:6-18.
Hintze H, Wenzel A, Danielsen B. Behaviour of approximal carious lesions assessed by clinical examination after tooth separation and radiography: a 2.5-year longitudinal study in young adults. Caries Res 1999;33:415-22.
Brown JP, Amaechi BT, Bader JD, Gilbert GH, Makhija SK, Pineda J et al. Visual scoring of non-cavitated caries lesions and clinical trial efficiency, testing xylitol in caries active adults. Community Dent Oral Epidemiol 2014;42:271-278. doi:10.1111/cdoe.12082.
Ferreira Zandona A, Santiago E, Eckert GJ, Katy BP, Pereira de Oliveira S, Capin OR et al. The natural history of dental caries lesions: a 4-year observational study. J Dent Res 2012;91:841-6.
Ritter AV, Bader JD, Leo MC, Preisser JS, Shugars DA, Vollmer WM et al. Tooth-surface specific effects of Xylitol: randomized trial results. J Dent Res 2013;92:512-7.
Doméjean S, White JM, Featherstone JD. Validation of the CDA CAMBRA caries risk assessment - a six year retrospective study. J Calif Dent Assoc 2011;39:709-15.
Banting DW, Amaechi BT, Bader JD, Blanchard P, Gilbert GH, Gullion CM et al. Examiner training and reliability in two randomized clinical trials of adult dental caries. J Public Health Dent 2011;71:335-44.
Rao JN, Scott AJ. A simple method for the analysis of clustered binary data. Biometrics 1992;15:385-97.
Lawrence HP, Sheiham A. Caries progression in 12- to 16-year-old schoolchildren in fluoridated and fluoride-deficient areas in Brazil. Community Dent Oral Epidemiol 1997;25:402-11.
Ismail A, Sohn W, Tellez M, Amaya A, Sen A, Hasson H et al. The International Caries Detection and Assessment System (ICDAS): an integrated system for measuring dental caries. Community Dent Oral Epidemiol 2007;35:170-8.
Curtis B, Warren E, Pollicino C, Evans RM, Schwartz E, Sbaraini A. The Monitor Practice Programme: is non-invasive management of dental caries in private practice cost effective? Aust Dent J 2011;56:48-55.
Groenveld A. Longitudinal study of prevalence of enamel lesions in a fluoridated and non-fluoridated area. Community Dent Oral Epidemiol 1985;13:159-63.
Gröndahl HG. Radiographic caries diagnosis. A study of caries progression and observer performance. Swedish Dent J 1979;3(Suppl):1-32.
Backer Dirks O. Posteruptive changes in dental enamel. J Dent Res 1966;45:503-10.
Rugg-Gunn AJ. Approximal carious lesions. A comparison of the radiological and clinical appearances. Br Dent J 1972;133:481-4.
Mejàre I, Källestål C, Stenlund H, Johansson H. Caries development from 11 to 22 years of age: a prospective radiographic study. Prevalence and distribution. Caries Res 1998;32:10-6.
Bader JD, Shugars DA, Vollmer WM, Gullion CM, Gilbert GH, Amaechi BT et al. Design of the xylitol for adult caries trial (X-ACT). BMC Oral Health 2010;10:22. doi: 10.1186/1472-6831-10-22
Bader JD, Vollmer WM, Shugars DA, Gilbert GH, Amaechi BT, Brown JP et al. Results from the Xylitol for Adult Caries Trial (X-ACT). J Am Dent Assoc 2013;144:21-30.
Gröndahl HG. Some factors influencing observer performance in radiographic caries diagnosis, and decision strategies in radiographic caries diagnosis. Swed Dent J 1979;3:157-72 and 173-80.
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References_xml – reference: Pitts NB. Monitoring of caries progression in permanent and primary posterior approximal enamel by bitewing radiography. Community Dent Oral Epidemiol 1983;11:228-35.
– reference: Rao JN, Scott AJ. A simple method for the analysis of clustered binary data. Biometrics 1992;15:385-97.
– reference: Curtis B, Warren E, Pollicino C, Evans RM, Schwartz E, Sbaraini A. The Monitor Practice Programme: is non-invasive management of dental caries in private practice cost effective? Aust Dent J 2011;56:48-55.
– reference: Gröndahl HG. Radiographic caries diagnosis. A study of caries progression and observer performance. Swedish Dent J 1979;3(Suppl):1-32.
– reference: Pot TJ, Groenveld A, Purdell-Lewis DJ. The origin and behavior of white spot enamel lesions. Ned Tijdschr Tandheelkd 1977;85:6-18.
– reference: Backer Dirks O. Posteruptive changes in dental enamel. J Dent Res 1966;45:503-10.
– reference: Hintze H, Wenzel A, Danielsen B. Behaviour of approximal carious lesions assessed by clinical examination after tooth separation and radiography: a 2.5-year longitudinal study in young adults. Caries Res 1999;33:415-22.
– reference: Rugg-Gunn AJ. Approximal carious lesions. A comparison of the radiological and clinical appearances. Br Dent J 1972;133:481-4.
– reference: Bader JD, Shugars DA, Vollmer WM, Gullion CM, Gilbert GH, Amaechi BT et al. Design of the xylitol for adult caries trial (X-ACT). BMC Oral Health 2010;10:22. doi: 10.1186/1472-6831-10-22
– reference: Lawrence HP, Sheiham A. Caries progression in 12- to 16-year-old schoolchildren in fluoridated and fluoride-deficient areas in Brazil. Community Dent Oral Epidemiol 1997;25:402-11.
– reference: Bader JD, Vollmer WM, Shugars DA, Gilbert GH, Amaechi BT, Brown JP et al. Results from the Xylitol for Adult Caries Trial (X-ACT). J Am Dent Assoc 2013;144:21-30.
– reference: Ismail A, Sohn W, Tellez M, Amaya A, Sen A, Hasson H et al. The International Caries Detection and Assessment System (ICDAS): an integrated system for measuring dental caries. Community Dent Oral Epidemiol 2007;35:170-8.
– reference: Hintze H. Caries behaviour in Danish teenagers: a longitudinal radiographic study. Int J Paediatr Dent 1997;7:227-34.
– reference: Groenveld A. Longitudinal study of prevalence of enamel lesions in a fluoridated and non-fluoridated area. Community Dent Oral Epidemiol 1985;13:159-63.
– reference: Doméjean S, White JM, Featherstone JD. Validation of the CDA CAMBRA caries risk assessment - a six year retrospective study. J Calif Dent Assoc 2011;39:709-15.
– reference: Gröndahl HG. Some factors influencing observer performance in radiographic caries diagnosis, and decision strategies in radiographic caries diagnosis. Swed Dent J 1979;3:157-72 and 173-80.
– reference: Banting DW, Amaechi BT, Bader JD, Blanchard P, Gilbert GH, Gullion CM et al. Examiner training and reliability in two randomized clinical trials of adult dental caries. J Public Health Dent 2011;71:335-44.
– reference: Mejàre I, Källestål C, Stenlund H, Johansson H. Caries development from 11 to 22 years of age: a prospective radiographic study. Prevalence and distribution. Caries Res 1998;32:10-6.
– reference: Ferreira Zandona A, Santiago E, Eckert GJ, Katy BP, Pereira de Oliveira S, Capin OR et al. The natural history of dental caries lesions: a 4-year observational study. J Dent Res 2012;91:841-6.
– reference: Brown JP, Amaechi BT, Bader JD, Gilbert GH, Makhija SK, Pineda J et al. Visual scoring of non-cavitated caries lesions and clinical trial efficiency, testing xylitol in caries active adults. Community Dent Oral Epidemiol 2014;42:271-278. doi:10.1111/cdoe.12082.
– reference: Ritter AV, Bader JD, Leo MC, Preisser JS, Shugars DA, Vollmer WM et al. Tooth-surface specific effects of Xylitol: randomized trial results. J Dent Res 2013;92:512-7.
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  article-title: Caries behaviour in Danish teenagers: a longitudinal radiographic study
  publication-title: Int J Paediatr Dent
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  article-title: Caries progression in 12‐ to 16‐year‐old schoolchildren in fluoridated and fluoride‐deficient areas in Brazil
  publication-title: Community Dent Oral Epidemiol
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  year: 1992
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  article-title: A simple method for the analysis of clustered binary data
  publication-title: Biometrics
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  article-title: Longitudinal study of prevalence of enamel lesions in a fluoridated and non‐fluoridated area
  publication-title: Community Dent Oral Epidemiol
– year: 2005
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  publication-title: BMC Oral Health
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  publication-title: Community Dent Oral Epidemiol
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  article-title: The origin and behavior of white spot enamel lesions
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  article-title: Posteruptive changes in dental enamel
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Snippet Objective To describe the full range of behavior of the visible, noncavitated, early caries lesion in caries‐active adults with substantial fluoride exposure,...
To describe the full range of behavior of the visible, noncavitated, early caries lesion in caries-active adults with substantial fluoride exposure, and to...
Objective To describe the full range of behavior of the visible, noncavitated, early caries lesion in caries-active adults with substantial fluoride exposure,...
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StartPage 208
SubjectTerms Adult
adults
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
caries
cariology
clinical decision making
Dental caries
Dental Caries - pathology
Dentistry
Disease Progression
early caries lesion
fluoride
Fluorides
Humans
Middle Aged
Time Factors
Tooth Crown - pathology
Tooth Root - pathology
Young Adult
Title The dynamic behavior of the early dental caries lesion in caries-active adults and implications
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