Associations between fluoride concentration in successive layers of human enamel and individual dental caries experience

Serial acid applications were used for sampling 10 successive layers of clinically sound labial enamel of 36 upper premolar teeth extracted from 14- to 16-year-old patients whose caries experience ranged from 0 to 25 DMFT. The mean depths of layers at their centres ranged from 0.36 μm, SD 0.04, to 1...

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Published inArchives of oral biology Vol. 24; no. 10; pp. 847 - 852
Main Authors Schamschula, R.G., Agus, Helen, Charlton, G., Duppenthaler, J.L., Un, Pauline
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Elsevier Ltd 1979
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Summary:Serial acid applications were used for sampling 10 successive layers of clinically sound labial enamel of 36 upper premolar teeth extracted from 14- to 16-year-old patients whose caries experience ranged from 0 to 25 DMFT. The mean depths of layers at their centres ranged from 0.36 μm, SD 0.04, to 140.2 μm, SD 10.8; corresponding mean F concentrations were 1737 parts/10 6, and 62 parts/10 6. No associations were found between DMFT and layer depth, as a measure of solubility, or the F concentration in the surface enamel layer. Consistent inverse associations were demonstrated between DMFT and the F concentration of enamel in subsurface and deep layers over the whole sample and for all age groups separately. At 4.2 μm and in deeper layers, 32–45 per cent of variation in DMFT could be explained in terms of variation in the F content of enamel. The results suggest that surface samples confuse the relation between caries experience and the internal F content of enamel.
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ISSN:0003-9969
1879-1506
DOI:10.1016/0003-9969(79)90049-9