2019
DOI: 10.1016/j.jdent.2019.05.028
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Clinical presentation of two phenotypes of tooth wear patients

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Cited by 10 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…In this study, 28 out of 49 patients with severe RO with ETW showed PPI resistance, and eight out of 28 had collagen diseases (scleroderma). Specific clinical signs, such as C or L‐shaped wear, concavities and cupping on the occlusal surfaces and loss of convexities on the palatal surfaces of maxillary teeth were mainly observed, 19–21 and there was a significant difference on C or L‐shaped wear between the clinical severity of RO. Although GERD‐related ETW was based on the chemical factor, these main clinical signs also indicated the influence of the mechanical factor 20,21 .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%
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“…In this study, 28 out of 49 patients with severe RO with ETW showed PPI resistance, and eight out of 28 had collagen diseases (scleroderma). Specific clinical signs, such as C or L‐shaped wear, concavities and cupping on the occlusal surfaces and loss of convexities on the palatal surfaces of maxillary teeth were mainly observed, 19–21 and there was a significant difference on C or L‐shaped wear between the clinical severity of RO. Although GERD‐related ETW was based on the chemical factor, these main clinical signs also indicated the influence of the mechanical factor 20,21 .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Specific clinical signs, such as C or L‐shaped wear, concavities and cupping on the occlusal surfaces and loss of convexities on the palatal surfaces of maxillary teeth were mainly observed, 19–21 and there was a significant difference on C or L‐shaped wear between the clinical severity of RO. Although GERD‐related ETW was based on the chemical factor, these main clinical signs also indicated the influence of the mechanical factor 20,21 . The palatal surfaces of the maxillary anterior and occlusal surfaces of premolars and molars were affected by not only chemical factors but also mechanical factors, 20,21 which may further influence ETW.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%
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“…Attrition is the result of tooth to tooth contact with no other factors (Grzegocka, Williams, Loster, Wieczorek, & Loster, 2016). Wear due to mechanical causes, including normal attrition, result in occluding surfaces that match in jaw movements and have similar degrees of wear, vs abrasive wear which typically presents at the cervical region and is wide rather than deep in modern populations (Hammoudi, Trulsson, Semdberg, & Svensson, 2019b). Chemical erosion changes the original tooth morphology by removal of enamel, flattening convex surfaces, deepening occlusal grooves and removing enamel along lingual surfaces at the cervical line (Hammoudi et al, 2019b).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Clinical presentation of tooth wear at intake was scored using 3Dscans and intra oral images by one researcher on patient-level using an individualized index. This index was based on already existing indices and focused on 5 morphological features of tooth wear lesions, according toHammoudiet al (2019) and can be found in Table 1 [12,13]. The features of mechanical tooth wear include 1) A similar degree of wear in all occluding sextants, and 2) The imprint of mandibular anterior teeth on palatal surfaces of maxillary anterior teeth.…”
Section: Data Collection Before Restorative Interventionmentioning
confidence: 99%