Most Viewed Abstracts
1. Report Shows Shift in Starting Salaries for Physicians 2. 2008 Exclusive Survey—Earnings: Good news for primary care income 3. Medicare pay-for-reporting effort draws fire from frustrated doctors 4. Debunking Myths in the US Healthcare System 5. Doctors and the DEA Free full text
Top Ten Searches
periodontitis pharyngitis gingivitis amalgam fluoride mutans pulp candidiasis pulp malocclusionYour Article Summary
Prevalence and distribution of demarcated opacities in permanent 1st molars and incisors in 6 to 8-year-old Danish children
Acta Odontologica Scandinavica, 09/18/08
Wogelius P et al. - In 647 children with four fully erupted permanent 1st molars, the prevalence of demarcated opacities and of lesions with loss of tooth substance due to demarcated opacities in any 1st molar was 37.3% and 6.3%, respectively. Permanent incisors were 2.5 times more frequently affected among children with one or more affected permanent 1st molar than among children with no such teeth. Demarcated creamy-white opacities were the type of lesion found most frequently, and the most frequently affected tooth types were the upper central incisors followed by 1st molars.
Today in Pediatric Dentistry...keeping you current
Receive free subspecialty "5-minute updates" via email
Untreated Dental Caries in a Brazilian Paediatric AIDS Patient Population
Oral Health & Preventive Dentistry, 12/09/09
Influence of Diet and Salivary Characteristics on the Prevalence of Dental Erosion among 12-year-old Schoolchildren
Journal of Dentistry for Children, 12/07/09
Pyogenic Granuloma: Lobular Capillary Hemangioma in the Upper Lip of a 24-month-old Child: Case Report
Journal of Dentistry for Children, 12/07/09
Article Search
Sponsor


See Latest Articles


