Dental caries: Strategies to control this preventable disease

Objective. To provide a brief commentary review of strategies to control dental caries. Dental decay is one of man’s most prevalent diseases. In many counties, severity increased in parallel with importation of sugar, reaching its zenith about 1950s and 1960s. Since then, severity has declined in ma...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Andrew Rugg-Gunn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Academy of Sciences and Arts of Bosnia and Herzegovina 2013-11-01
Series:Acta Medica Academica
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ama.ba/index.php/ama/article/view/183/pdf_17
id doaj-022db93de6664fa58dc4b45d2bede94f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-022db93de6664fa58dc4b45d2bede94f2020-11-25T01:01:16ZengAcademy of Sciences and Arts of Bosnia and HerzegovinaActa Medica Academica1840-18481840-28792013-11-0142211713010.5644/ama2006-124.80Dental caries: Strategies to control this preventable diseaseAndrew Rugg-Gunn0School of Dental Sciences, Newcastle University, UKObjective. To provide a brief commentary review of strategies to control dental caries. Dental decay is one of man’s most prevalent diseases. In many counties, severity increased in parallel with importation of sugar, reaching its zenith about 1950s and 1960s. Since then, severity has declined in many countries, due to the wide use of fluoride especially in toothpaste, but dental caries remains a disease of medical, social and economic importance. Within the EU in 2011, the cost of dental treatment was estimated to be €79 billion. The pathogenesis is well understood: bacteria in dental plaque (biofilm) metabolise dietary sugars to acids which then dissolve dental enamel and dentine. Possible approaches to control caries development, therefore, involve: removal of plaque, reducing the acidogenic potential of plaque, reduction in sugar consumption, increasing the tooth’s resistance to acid attack, and coating the tooth surface to form a barrier between plaque and enamel. At the present time, only three approaches are of practical importance: sugar control, fluoride, and fissure sealing. The evidence that dietary sugars are the main cause of dental caries is extensive, and comes from six types of study. Without sugar, caries would be negligible. Fluoride acts in several ways to aid caries prevention. Ways of delivering fluoride can be classed as: ‘automatic’, ‘home care’ and ‘professional care’: the most important of these are discussed in detail in four articles in this issue of the Acta Medica Academica. Conclusion. Dental caries is preventable – individuals, communities and countries need strategies to achieve this. http://www.ama.ba/index.php/ama/article/view/183/pdf_17Dental cariesDietNutritionFluoridePublic health strategies
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andrew Rugg-Gunn
spellingShingle Andrew Rugg-Gunn
Dental caries: Strategies to control this preventable disease
Acta Medica Academica
Dental caries
Diet
Nutrition
Fluoride
Public health strategies
author_facet Andrew Rugg-Gunn
author_sort Andrew Rugg-Gunn
title Dental caries: Strategies to control this preventable disease
title_short Dental caries: Strategies to control this preventable disease
title_full Dental caries: Strategies to control this preventable disease
title_fullStr Dental caries: Strategies to control this preventable disease
title_full_unstemmed Dental caries: Strategies to control this preventable disease
title_sort dental caries: strategies to control this preventable disease
publisher Academy of Sciences and Arts of Bosnia and Herzegovina
series Acta Medica Academica
issn 1840-1848
1840-2879
publishDate 2013-11-01
description Objective. To provide a brief commentary review of strategies to control dental caries. Dental decay is one of man’s most prevalent diseases. In many counties, severity increased in parallel with importation of sugar, reaching its zenith about 1950s and 1960s. Since then, severity has declined in many countries, due to the wide use of fluoride especially in toothpaste, but dental caries remains a disease of medical, social and economic importance. Within the EU in 2011, the cost of dental treatment was estimated to be €79 billion. The pathogenesis is well understood: bacteria in dental plaque (biofilm) metabolise dietary sugars to acids which then dissolve dental enamel and dentine. Possible approaches to control caries development, therefore, involve: removal of plaque, reducing the acidogenic potential of plaque, reduction in sugar consumption, increasing the tooth’s resistance to acid attack, and coating the tooth surface to form a barrier between plaque and enamel. At the present time, only three approaches are of practical importance: sugar control, fluoride, and fissure sealing. The evidence that dietary sugars are the main cause of dental caries is extensive, and comes from six types of study. Without sugar, caries would be negligible. Fluoride acts in several ways to aid caries prevention. Ways of delivering fluoride can be classed as: ‘automatic’, ‘home care’ and ‘professional care’: the most important of these are discussed in detail in four articles in this issue of the Acta Medica Academica. Conclusion. Dental caries is preventable – individuals, communities and countries need strategies to achieve this.
topic Dental caries
Diet
Nutrition
Fluoride
Public health strategies
url http://www.ama.ba/index.php/ama/article/view/183/pdf_17
work_keys_str_mv AT andrewrugggunn dentalcariesstrategiestocontrolthispreventabledisease
_version_ 1725209747587596288