| D003782 |
Dental Pulp |
A richly vascularized and innervated connective tissue of mesodermal origin, contained in the central cavity of a tooth and delimited by the dentin, and having formative, nutritive, sensory, and protective functions. (Jablonski, Dictionary of Dentistry, 1992) |
Dental Pulps,Pulp, Dental,Pulps, Dental |
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| D003804 |
Dentin |
The hard portion of the tooth surrounding the pulp, covered by enamel on the crown and cementum on the root, which is harder and denser than bone but softer than enamel, and is thus readily abraded when left unprotected. (From Jablonski, Dictionary of Dentistry, 1992) |
Dentine,Dentines,Dentins |
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| D006801 |
Humans |
Members of the species Homo sapiens. |
Homo sapiens,Man (Taxonomy),Human,Man, Modern,Modern Man |
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| D014070 |
Tooth |
One of a set of bone-like structures in the mouth used for biting and chewing. |
Teeth |
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| D014072 |
Tooth Abrasion |
The pathologic wearing away of the tooth substance by brushing, bruxism, clenching, and other mechanical causes. It is differentiated from TOOTH ATTRITION in that this type of wearing away is the result of tooth-to-tooth contact, as in mastication, occurring only on the occlusal, incisal, and proximal surfaces. It differs also from TOOTH EROSION, the progressive loss of the hard substance of a tooth by chemical processes not involving bacterial action. (From Jablonski, Dictionary of Dentistry, 1992, p2) |
Dental Abrasion,Abrasion, Dental,Abrasion, Tooth |
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| D014077 |
Tooth Erosion |
Progressive loss of the hard substance of a tooth by chemical processes that do not involve bacterial action. (Jablonski, Dictionary of Dentistry, 1992, p296) |
Dental Enamel Erosion,Dental Erosion,Dental Enamel Erosions,Dental Erosions,Enamel Erosion, Dental,Erosion, Dental,Erosion, Dental Enamel,Erosion, Tooth,Tooth Erosions |
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| D057085 |
Tooth Wear |
Loss of the tooth substance by chemical or mechanical processes |
Dental Wear,Dental Wears,Tooth Wears,Wear, Dental,Wear, Tooth,Wears, Dental,Wears, Tooth |
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| D019217 |
Tooth Attrition |
The wearing away of a tooth as a result of tooth-to-tooth contact, as in mastication, occurring only on the occlusal, incisal, and proximal surfaces. It is chiefly associated with aging. It is differentiated from TOOTH ABRASION (the pathologic wearing away of the tooth substance by friction, as brushing, bruxism, clenching, and other mechanical causes) and from TOOTH EROSION (the loss of substance caused by chemical action without bacterial action). (Jablonski, Dictionary of Dentistry, 1992, p86) |
Dental Attrition,Attrition, Dental,Occlusal Wear,Attrition, Tooth,Dental Attritions,Occlusal Wears,Wear, Occlusal,Wears, Occlusal |
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| D064347 |
Microscopy, Electrochemical, Scanning |
A scanning probe microscopy technique that uses an ultramicroelectrode as the scanning probe that simultaneously records changes in electrochemical potential as it scans thereby creating topographical images with localized electrochemical information. |
Electrochemical Scanning Microscopy,Scanning Electrochemical Microscopy,Electrochemical Microscopy, Scanning,Microscopy, Electrochemical Scanning,Microscopy, Scanning Electrochemical,Scanning Microscopy, Electrochemical |
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