Zero Domenick T, Fontana Margherita, Martínez-Mier E Angeles, Ferreira-Zandoná Andréa, Ando Masatoshi, González-Cabezas Carlos, Bayne Stephen
Department of Preventive and Community Dentistry, Indiana University School of Dentistry, 415 Lansing St., Indianapolis, Indiana 46202-2876, USA.
J Am Dent Assoc. 2009 Sep;140 Suppl 1:25S-34S. doi: 10.14219/jada.archive.2009.0355.
Scientific advances in cariology in the past 150 years have led to the understanding that dental caries is a chronic, dietomicrobial, site-specific disease caused by a shift from protective factors favoring tooth remineralization to destructive factors leading to demineralization. Epidemiologic data indicate that caries has changed in the last century; it now is distributed unequally in the U.S. population. People who are minorities, homeless, migrants, children with disabilities and of lower socioeconomic status suffer from the highest prevalence and severity of dental caries.
Scientific advances have led to improvements in the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of dental caries, but there is a need for new diagnostic tools and treatment methods.
and
Future management of dental caries requires early detection and risk assessment if the profession is to achieve timely and cost-effective prevention and treatment for those who need it most. Dental professionals look forward to the day when people of all ages and backgrounds view dental caries as a disease of the past.
过去150年龋病学的科学进展使人们认识到,龋齿是一种慢性、饮食微生物性、特定部位的疾病,其病因是从有利于牙齿再矿化的保护因素向导致脱矿的破坏因素转变。流行病学数据表明,龋齿在过去一个世纪发生了变化;目前在美国人群中分布不均。少数族裔、无家可归者、移民、残疾儿童以及社会经济地位较低的人群患龋齿的患病率和严重程度最高。
科学进展已使龋齿的预防、诊断和治疗得到改善,但仍需要新的诊断工具和治疗方法。
如果该行业要为最需要的人实现及时且具有成本效益的预防和治疗,未来龋齿的管理需要早期检测和风险评估。牙科专业人员期待着有一天,所有年龄和背景的人都将龋齿视为过去的疾病。