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Toothwear ; An emerging trend in Sri Lanka. Dr. Manil Fonseka BDS, LDSRCS (Eng) MS (Restorative Dentistry) Department of Restorative Dentistry 11 th September 2014. Historical Perspective. Normal physiologic process
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Toothwear; An emerging trend in Sri Lanka Dr. Manil Fonseka BDS, LDSRCS (Eng) MS (Restorative Dentistry) Department of Restorative Dentistry 11th September 2014
Historical Perspective • Normal physiologic process • Some tooth-wear essential for efficient function of teeth which is seen in many herbivores • Important to establish unhindered guidance during mastication • However the level of tooth wear minimal
Rates of tooth-wear • 2500 years for 1mm of enamel wear with normal function • Estimated the level of tooth wear to be 29µm for molars and 15µm for premolars (Lambrechts et al, 1989) • Physiological wear poses minimal problems • If the rate of wear challenges the viability of teeth TSL considered pathologic
Factors precipitating tooth-wear • Multi-factorial aetiology • Increase in life expectancy Increased functional demand Longer exposure to erosive foods Recession and exposure of relatively weaker cementum Increased use of medication Quantitative and qualitative reduction in salivary flow Loss of teeth increases demand on the remaining teeth
Diet • Dietary changes have resulted in the diets being less abrasive • Should theoretically reduce the levels of tooth-wear • Excessive consumption of erosive beverages and foods has had a potentiating effect on the increased prevalence of NCTSL
Implicated foods • Fizzy drinks (pH 2.2 – 3.8) • Fruit juices (pH 3.0 – 4.0) • Wines (pH 3.2 – 4.8) • Cider and Beer (pH 3.5 – 4.0) • Citrus fruits • Increased prevalence among children and adolescents in the UK (35%) • Condition of affluent in Sri Lanka (Ratnayake N & Ekanayake L. 2010)
Extrinsic Acid Erosion Intrinsic Acid Erosion
Intrinsic Acid • pH of Gastric acid is 1-2 Gastric Regurgitation Bulaemia and anorexia Vomitting Classically presents as palatal/lingual erosive defects
Para-function • Stress induced parafunction • Bruxism • Object biting
Problems of para-function • 700 times the normal masticatory load • Force used is considerably greater than during normal mastication • Seen as wear in non functional cusps Molars may be severely affected Prominantmasseters Marked antigonial notching Tenderness of muscles of mastication
Other factors contributing to tooth surface loss • Defective enamel and dentine deposition and maturation ( E.g AI, DI, Hypoplasias) • Abrasive restorative material (Unglazed porcelain) • Abrasive dentifrices and hard brushing in horizontal strokes • Habits – Instrument biting, Needles etc
Scale of the Problem • 98% of individuals in the UK have some amount of tooth wear • Increased prevalence among children, deciduous teeth • 30% of individuals in the UK have severe tooth wear (Tooth Wear Index scores of 3 & 4) • Problem of affluent in Sri Lanka
Types of tooth-wear • Erosion - Intrinsic or Extrinsic acid • Attrition - Tooth to tooth contact • Abrasion - Due to foreign objects • Abfraction - Repeated cyclic flexion of teeth • Mostly multi-factorial thus cannot home-in on one cause
Erosion • Due to intrinsic or extrinsic acid • Intrinsic acid regurgitation due to gastric reflux disease (Bullaemia, Anorexia, Gastritis, GORD) • Extrinsic acid consumption (Coke, Fizzy drinks, Fruit juices, tamarind) • Increasingly seen in young due to change in lifestyles
Extrinsic Acid Erosion • Buccal and Labial surfaces • Lingual and palatal spared • Intrinsic Acid Erosion • Palatal and lingual surfaces • Lower incisors spared • Etched like appearance • Cupping • Discoloured if historical • “Proud” restorations
Attrition • Tooth to tooth contact • Accelerated due to para-function • Wear on non-functional cusps • Seen in anterior teeth when posteriors are lost • No loss of OVD due to dento-alveolar compensation • Erosion potentiates attrition (De-mastication)
Abrasion Overzelous brushing Horizontal Strokes Abrasive Dentifrices and Brushes
Effects of NCTSL • Sensitivity of teeth • Pulpal and Periodontal complications • Poor aesthetics • Impeded function • Prone to fracture • Low self esteem (OHRQoL)
Aides to Diagnosis • Detailed history • Occupation, Social, Dietary analysis, Medical history • Examination • Masticatory apparatus, Wear facets and their location, “proud” restorations • Investigations • Radiographs, Photographs, Dated study casts
Strategies in the management of NCTSL • Psycho-social support • Medical referrals (GERD) • Habit intervention • Reduction in consumption of erosive beverages • Using a straw • Soft mouth guards to protect teeth during gastric regurgitation (Addition of Fluoride gel) • Michigan splints to reduce effects of bruxism
Challenges in management • Lack of vertical space due to dento-alveolar compensation mechanisms • Excessive loading of restorations • If the cause continues tooth-wear would continue • Frequent recall and maintenance Primary aim in treatment prevent/reduce the causes and replace what is lost and maintain available tooth tissue for adequate function and aesthetics
Re-organisation • Should be well planned not haphazard • Based on sound prosthodontic principles • In dentate patients a raise of 11mm of OVD could be tolarated • Anterior and canine guidance maintained without posterior interference • Try with a splint first and go for definitive restorations if patient tolarates