Notes
Fluoride
Modes of Action
Systemic (pre-eruptive) Effect
- incorporated into enamel structure in the form of fluor-apatite - ↓ mineral solubility
Topical (post-eruptive) Effect
- Calcium fluoride - ↑ remineralization
Fluoride Toothpaste - Sodium fluoride (NaF) or Sodium monofluorophosphate (SMFP)
Sodium pyrophosphate - anticalulus agent
Percentage of UK population has reach for fluoridate water : 10%
Fluoride Mouthwashes - 0.05% daily or 0.2% weekly
Fluoride Varnishes - 2.26% F¯ / 22,600ppm → 4 times a year for high caries risk children
Fluoride Toxicity - 5mg F/kg body weight - drink large volume of milk / gastric lavage
Certain Lethal Dosage - 32-64 mg/kg
Use of Duraphat 5% NaF is contraindicated - ulcerative gingivitis and stomatitis
Acidity (critical pH) below which enamel decalcification occurs - 5.5
Most commonly impacted teeth - 3rd molars → 2nd premolars → canines
Abnormal position of crypts - lower 2nd premolar
Ectopic - upper canines
Hyperdontia
Normal shape (supplemental teeth)
Abnormal form (supernumerary teeth) - conical / tuberculate
Alcohol Consumption
All adults - not more than 14 units per week, spread evenly over 3 days or more
Higher risk - more than 35 units per week (women) and more than 50 units per week (men)
Recall Interval
3, 6, 9 or 12 months - younger than 18 y/o
3, 6, 9, 12, 15, 18, 21 or 24 months (longest) - 18 y/o and above
Statistics
Incidence (new cases) = number of individuals who develop a specific disease or experience a specific health-related event during a particular time period (such as a month or year)
Prevalence (all current cases) = total number of individuals in a population who have a disease or health condition at a specific period of time, usually expressed as a percentage of the population
Prevalence = incidence x duration of illness
Hypothesis = proposed explanation for a phenomenon
Null hypothesis = opposite to hypothesis
↓ must know ↓
Common Risk Factor Approach - several chronic diseases have common risk factors
❌ disease-centred approach
Bradford Hill Criteria - causation between exposure (risk factor) & disease / health condition
Hawthorne effect - response bias (being observed)
Berkson bias - selection bias (only assess patients admitted to facility)
Central tendency bias - score / mark middle of scale
② Binary data ➡ chi-squared test
③ Normally distributed continuous data ➡ ANOVA
④ Known risk factor & outcome of interest ➡ Spearman's coefficient
⤷ normally distributed ➡ Pearson's correlation coefficient
Oral Health Need Assessment (OHNA) - when commissioning new dental services, examination of current services is needed
Evidence-Based Dentistry
3 Key Components of EBD
- Clinically relevant questions
- Systemic review
- Evidenced-based conclusions
Systemic review = reports and recommendations that summarize the effectiveness of particular interventions, treatments or services and often include information about their applicability, costs and implementation barriers
Meta-analysis = consolidated and quantitative review of the large, complex and sometimes conflicting body of literature
Primary prevention - ensure disease does not occur e.g. water fluoridation
Secondary prevention - early intervention in those already affected (incipient stage)
Tertiary prevention - treatment of well-established disease
Confidence interval = precision or uncertainty of study results for making inferences about the population of patients (narrower as sample size ↑)
Efficacy = whether an intervention works in people who receive it, e.g. surgical trials, analgesics
Efficiency = intervention works in people to whom it has been offered, participants may accept / refuse
Phase I, II and III Trials
Phase I : healthy volunteers → safety, appropriate dose level
Phase II : efficacy - condition requiring drug
Phase III : effectiveness - comparing new drug with existing similar drug
Phase IV (not RCT) : monitoring / survey
Internal validity = degree to which the trial has been designed, conducted and analysed well
External validity = precision and extend to which it is possible to generalized the results of publish trial to other setting
Primary source
- Research articles
- Case studies
Secondary sources
- Review articles
- Meta-analysis
Tertiary sources
- Textbook
- Manuals
- Encyclopedia
- Internet
- Popular press
↓ must know ↓



Fluoride varnish concentration should be 5%NaF = 2.26% F. Anyway, thank you for the amazing notes!
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