Conference paper

How valid are current diagnostic criteria for dental erosion?


Authors listGanss, Carolina

Publication year2008

PagesS41-S49

JournalClinical Oral Investigations

Volume number12

ISSN1432-6981

eISSN1436-3771

Open access statusHybrid

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s00784-007-0175-3

ConferenceWorkshop on Current Epidemiological Approaches in the Field of Dental Erosion

PublisherSpringer


Abstract
In principle, there is agreement about the clinical diagnostic criteria for dental erosion, basically defined as cupping and grooving of the occlusal/incisal surfaces, shallow defects on smooth surfaces located coronal from the enamel-cementum junction with an intact cervical enamel rim and restorations rising above the adjacent tooth surface. This lesion characteristic was established from clinical experience and from observations in a small group of subjects with known exposure to acids rather than from systematic research. Their prevalence is higher in risk groups for dental erosion compared to subjects not particularly exposed to acids, but analytical epidemiological studies on random or cluster samples often fail to find a relation between occurrence or severity of lesions and any aetiological factor. Besides other aspects, this finding might be due to lack of validity with respect to diagnostic criteria. In particular, cupping and grooving might be an effect of abrasion as well as of erosion and their value for the specific diagnosis of erosion must be doubted. Knowledge about the validity of current diagnostic criteria of different forms of tooth wear is incomplete, therefore further research is needed.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleGanss, C. (2008) How valid are current diagnostic criteria for dental erosion?, Clinical Oral Investigations, 12, pp. S41-S49. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00784-007-0175-3

APA Citation styleGanss, C. (2008). How valid are current diagnostic criteria for dental erosion?. Clinical Oral Investigations. 12, S41-S49. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00784-007-0175-3



Keywords


ABRASIONANTERIOR TEETHDIETARYEnamelLINGUAL SURFACE ATTRITIONTEENAGERSTooth wearVALIDITY

Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 09:44