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Journal of Dental Research
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Combined Effect of Trace Elements and Fluoride on Caries: Changes Over Ten Years in Northwest Ohio (U.S.A.)

M.E.J. Curzon

Department of Caries Research, Eastman Dental Center, 625 Elmwood Ave., Rochester, New York 14620

Dental caries examinations were carried out in an area of low caries prevalence, ascribed to a combined effect of fluoride and other trace elements. Repeat examinations in 1978 on lifelong resident children aged from 12 to 14 yr showed caries distribution patterns to be essentially the same as those found in a previous study in 1968. Some changes in DMFS scores had occurred, which were associated with changes in the strontium content of the drinking water; low caries levels were significantly associated with high strontium concentrations.

Journal of Dental Research, Vol. 62, No. 2, 96-99 (1983)
DOI: 10.1177/00220345830620022001


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M.E.J. Curzon
The Relation Between Caries Prevalence and Strontium Concentrations in Drinking Water, Plaque, and Surface Enamel
Journal of Dental Research, December 1, 1985; 64(12): 1386 - 1388.
[Abstract] [PDF]


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M.R. Wegman, A.D. Eisenberg, M.E.J. Curzon, and S.L. Handelman
Effects of Fluoride, Lithium, and Strontium on Intracellular Polysaccharide Accumulation in S. mutans and A. viscosus
Journal of Dental Research, September 1, 1984; 63(9): 1126 - 1129.
[Abstract] [PDF]