Dentistry.
Publié le 11/05/2013
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Together with dentists, dental hygienists and dental assistants make up the team that provides dental care to patients.
Hygienists record patient medical histories, suchas blood pressure and pulse.
They clean teeth, apply sealants and fluoride treatments, teach patients sound oral hygiene practices, and often assist with X rays.
Manyhygienists receive a two-year associate degree, while others may choose to enroll in a four-year program at a university or in a master’s degree program.
There are250 dental hygiene programs and about 100,000 active dental hygienists in the United States.
Dental assistants may also take X rays and patient histories.
Typically, they sterilize dental instruments, make impressions of a patient’s teeth for record keeping,perform office management tasks, and communicate with patients and equipment suppliers.
There are more than 200,000 dental assistants working today.
Many begintheir careers without specialized training, but most attend a dental assistant program at a community college, vocational school, technical institute, or university beforeentering the field.
Most dentists in the United States belong to the ADA.
This professional organization lobbies the Congress of the United States to fund dental research and education;sets ethical and professional standards for practicing dentistry; accredits dental schools and training programs for dental assistants and hygienists; and providesconsumers and dentists with a guide to safe and effective dental products.
IV HISTORY OF DENTISTRY
Diseases of the teeth and gums have troubled humans for thousands of years.
Ancient Egyptian medical texts, dating back to 3500 BC, refer to toothaches.
The earliest record of dental treatment also comes from Egypt, where gum swelling was treated with a concoction of cumin, incense, and onion.
The earliest known dentist was Hesi-Re, an Egyptian “doctor of the tooth” who lived around 3000 BC.
There is evidence that toothaches were treated with acupuncture in China as early as 2700 BC.
By AD 659 the Chinese were filling cavities with a mixture of mercury, silver, and tin, nearly 1,000 years before amalgam was first used in Western countries.
Some cultures,such as the Maya, did not treat disease but decorated their teeth with stone and metal inlays for ornamental purposes.
Romans were known to be conscientious about their oral hygiene—it was common for dinner guests to be given gold picks to clean their teeth.
As early as 450 BC Romans treated toothaches, filled cavities, and fashioned bridges to replace extracted teeth.
In the 3rd century BC the Greek physician Diocles advised fellow citizens to rub teeth and gums with pulverized mint to remove particles of food.
The Greek physician Galen, who settled in Rome during the 2nd century AD, advocated the use of a file to remove decayed portions of a tooth.
During the Middle Ages, from the 5th to the 15th century AD, dentistry in Europe was practiced by barber-surgeons.
These professionals served the townspeople by performing a wide variety of services including cutting hair, extracting teeth, and applying leeches to let blood, a practice once believed to cure a variety of ailments.
Inthe late 14th and early 15th centuries a number of rapid-fire developments dramatically improved the quality of dental care.
For example, during this time surgeonsand anatomists in France, Belgium, Italy, and Germany developed an improved understanding of tooth anatomy, introduced the use of gold for fillings, and commonlyused materials, such as wood, to replace extracted teeth.
It was not until French dentist Pierre Fauchard published his influential work The Surgeon Dentist in 1728 that dentistry began to take its modern form.
Fauchard, now recognized as the father of modern dentistry, was the first person to provide a comprehensive and organized treatise on dental science for fellow practitioners to use.His work played a key role in enabling the specialty to break away from medicine and establish itself as a distinct, scientifically based profession.
The 19th century witnessed several developments that revolutionized the field.
Organized dentistry began in 1840 when the world’s first dental school, the BaltimoreCollege of Dental Surgery, opened in Baltimore, Maryland.
The use of general anesthesia in dentistry began in 1844 when Connecticut dentist Horace Wells first usedthe chemical compound nitrous oxide, commonly known as laughing gas, to relieve pain during a dental procedure.
Two years later, his former partner, William ThomasMorton, introduced the use of ether as a general anesthetic at a public demonstration.
In 1858 American dentist Greene Vardiman Black invented the foot-powereddental drill, a novelty that enabled dentists to use both hands during drilling procedures.
In 1890 American biochemist Willoughby Dayton Miller showed that sugars in food residue on the teeth are broken down by bacteria, creating acids that damage toothenamel, leading to tooth decay.
Miller’s work played a significant role in developing the rationale for what is known today as professional tooth cleaning.
The invention ofthe X ray in 1895 by German physicist Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen enabled dentists to examine teeth for hidden cavities and decay.
Perhaps the greatest advance of the 20th century for dentistry began in the early 1900s when the small population of Colorado Springs, Colorado, was found to havelow rates of tooth decay.
It was discovered that the town’s water supply contained fluoride, a naturally occurring element found in rocks and minerals.
Public healthresearchers suggested that adding fluoride to the water supplies in cities all over the United States could dramatically reduce the incidence of tooth decay.
In 1945 awater fluoridation program was begun in Michigan to test this hypothesis.
Ten years later the test results showed that tooth decay in participating children was reducedby 50 to 70 percent.
Despite the objections of opponents who fear fluoridation may have long-term adverse health effects, most of the U.S.
water supply is nowfluoridated.
Although a controversial issue, numerous public and privately funded studies have confirmed the benefits and low health risks of water fluoridation, andfluoridation programs are endorsed by several national and international health organizations, including the ADA, the American Medical Association (AMA), and the WorldHealth Organization (WHO).
The field of dentistry continues to evolve.
When a woman in Florida announced in 1990 that she had contracted the virus that causes acquired immunodeficiencysyndrome (AIDS) from her dentist, dentists were forced to reexamine their infection control methods.
While recommendations had been in place to prevent the spreadof viruses that could be passed through blood-to-blood contact, a majority of dentists did not routinely follow them.
Dentists now equip themselves with gloves, gowns,and masks during dental exams and routinely sterilize their instruments to provide appropriate protection for their patients.
New and emerging technology may change the way patients receive dental treatment.
Today dentists make an impression of a tooth to make a bridge or partialdenture, but computer aided design-computer assisted manufacturing (CAD-CAM) technology will enable dentists to scan the damaged tooth and transfer a three-dimensional image to the computer.
The computer can precisely blueprint the image and physically construct the portion of the tooth necessary to restore it to itsoriginal shape.
Lasers, which are used currently to treat diseased gums and other oral tissues, have recently been approved for use on teeth and may someday becomean alternative to the dental drill.
Genetics and advanced biomaterials research will also significantly change dentistry in the future.
One day saliva and tissue tests will use genetic techniques to detectthe presence of oral disease-causing pathogens.
Better materials with which to restore and replace teeth are already a reality—researchers have developed bettermethods to repair the bone that supports teeth, and, eventually, tooth implants may completely replace dentures.
In the United States, the aging population will have a profound effect on dental care.
Population projections suggest that people age 65 and over will number 40 millionby the year 2010, and with modern dental care, more of these people are likely to keep their teeth.
Instead of the traditional practice of providing dentures for patientswho lose their teeth, dentists of the future will be able to shift their focus to treatment of age-related oral diseases, such as advanced gum disease.
Contributed By:Chris Martin.
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