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CHURCHILL’S POCKETBOOKS

Clinical Dentistry


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CHURCHILL’S POCKETBOOKS

Clinical Dentistry
4th EDITION

Edited by

Professor Crispian Scully CBE
MD, PhD, MDS, MRCS, BSc, FDSRCS, FDSRCPS, FFDRCSI, FDSRCSE,
FRCPath, FMedSci, FHEA, FUCL, FSB, DSc, DChD, DMed (HC), Dr.hc
Co-Director, WHO Collaborating Centre for Oral Health-General Health;
Emeritus Professor, UCL (London) and Visiting Professor, Universities
of Athens, Edinburgh, Helsinki, Hertfordshire, Middlesex and Plymouth

Edinburgh  London  New York  Oxford  Philadelphia  St Louis  Sydney  Toronto  2016


© 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any
means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or any information
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how to seek permission, further information about the Publisher’s permissions policies


and our arrangements with organizations such as the Copyright Clearance Center and the
Copyright Licensing Agency, can be found at our website: www.elsevier.com/permissions.
This book and the individual contributions contained in it are protected under
copyright by the Publisher (other than as may be noted herein).
First edition 1998
Second edition 2002
Third edition 2007
Fourth edition 2016
ISBN 978-0-7020-5150-0
International ISBN 978-0-7020-5149-4
Notices
Knowledge and best practice in this field are constantly changing. As new research and
experience broaden our understanding, changes in research methods, professional
practices, or medical treatment may become necessary.
Practitioners and researchers must always rely on their own experience and
knowledge in evaluating and using any information, methods, compounds, or
experiments described herein. In using such information or methods they should be
mindful of their own safety and the safety of others, including parties for whom they have
a professional responsibility.
With respect to any drug or pharmaceutical products identified, readers are advised to
check the most current information provided (i) on procedures featured or (ii) by the
manufacturer of each product to be administered, to verify the recommended dose or
formula, the method and duration of administration, and contraindications. It is the
responsibility of practitioners, relying on their own experience and knowledge of their
patients, to make diagnoses, to determine dosages and the best treatment for each
individual patient, and to take all appropriate safety precautions.
To the fullest extent of the law, neither the Publisher nor the authors, contributors, or
editors, assume any liability for any injury and/or damage to persons or property as a
matter of products liability, negligence or otherwise, or from any use or operation of any
methods, products, instructions, or ideas contained in the material herein.


Content Strategist: Alison Taylor
Content Development Specialist: Lynn Watt
Project Manager: Julie Taylor
Designer: Miles Hitchen
Illustration Manager: Emily Costantino
Printed in China
Last digit is the print number:  9  8  7  6  5  4  3  2  1

The
publisher’s
policy is to use
paper manufactured
from sustainable forests


Preface to the
Fourth Edition
As initiators of Clinical Dentistry, and editors of the first three editions, we are not only pleased to note the impressive success of the book
internationally but, in our increasingly busy senior academic roles, are also
delighted to pass the reins to our long-time colleague and friend, Professor
Crispian Scully CBE, and wish him and the contributors continued success
with the 4th edition.
Professor Ivor Chestnutt Cardiff
Professor John Gibson Glasgow
The primary objective of this Pocketbook was to provide a readily
accessible source of information when it is most needed, as an aidemémoire prior to carrying out clinical tasks or to enable students
(at undergraduate and postgraduate level) to apprise themselves
of important details prior to tutorials and seminars. Those aims
remain.

In a publication of this nature, information must be presented in
a concise and, at times, didactic fashion. The intent is to include
sufficient basic information to permit examinations to be passed.
However, the desire of an educationalist is always to promote deep
learning and the layout and content of the text are intended to motivate and guide the reader to the appropriate parts of more substantive texts, many of which have proven both inspirational and
motivational for the editors and contributors of this book throughout
their careers.
This textbook is widely used by more and more undergraduate
dental students, vocational dental practitioners, general professional
trainees, dental surgeons in primary care and in the hospital service,
as well as dental care professionals in-training and post-qualification.
I was requested to take on the editing of the 4th edition. For this
edition I have expanded the size and type of authorship. Although a
large proportion of current contributors were involved in earlier
editions, some previous authors were unavailable to help, so we have
also recruited a range of other top people in their fields. The current
authors are all experienced clinicians, teachers and/or managers
within their individual specialties and emphasis has been given to
information of practical clinical significance. Descriptions of rarely
encountered conditions and situations have been deliberately
minimized.


vi



Preface to the Fourth Edition

In updating this edition, each author has addressed significant

changes within his or her areas of expertise and I am grateful to them
for their enthusiasm and great industry and particularly for complying with deadlines.
Thus this new 4th edition has not only been invigorated and
enhanced but also the chapter order has been rearranged. We have
also expanded on practical aspects related to the regulator – the
General Dental Council; and on the dental team roles, and practice
management. The book has been written to be used in conjunction
with Scully’s Handbook of Medical Problems in Dentistry (Elsevier
2016) and now includes issues related to overseas dental staff, access
for disabled, advertising, aetiopathogenesis of dental disease, assaults
on staff, behaviour at work and outside (GDC standards), building
design, chaperoning, clothing, finance management, foundation and
vocational training, governance, health and safety, hiring and firing,
identifying staff, independent practice, infection control, information
technology, management skills, marketing, NHS regulations, overseas staff, professionalism, protected characteristics, significant event
analysis, time-keeping and things staff must do before starting work
and leaving a job. The aims and objectives remain the same – to
educate and inspire each member of the whole dental team, whether
in-training or post-qualification.
I am indebted for support from the authors, Professor Ivor Chestnutt, Professor John Gibson, Professor Justin Stebbing and at Elsevier,
Mrs Lynn Watt and Mrs Alison Taylor. Our thanks are also due to
former contributors, including Iain. B. Buchanan, Barbara. L. Chadwick, Ivor. G. Chestnutt, John Gibson, Jason Leitch, Joe McManners,
Jeremy Rees and Dave Stenhouse.
Crispian Scully
London, 2016


Contributors
Stephen Barter
BDS MSurgDent RCS

Specialist Oral Surgeon
Perlan Specialist Dental Centre
Hartfield Road
Eastbourne, UK
Stephen Barter is Clinical Director of Perlan Specialist Dental Centre, Eastbourne; Specialist in Oral Surgery and Hon. Lecturer in the Department of
Periodontology, UCL Eastman Dental Institute, London; ITI Fellow and past
Chairman of the UK and Ireland ITI Section and has been involved in the teaching and development of dental implantology for over 20 years.

John A.D. Cameron
BDS DGDP LLB (Hons)
Senior Clinical/Dental Adviser
Practitioner Services
NHS National Services Scotland
Edinburgh;
University of Aberdeen Dental School
Aberdeen, UK
John Cameron is Senior Dental Adviser at NHS National Services Scotland,
Senior Clinical Lecturer at the University of Aberdeen Dental School, Lead for
Law, Ethics and Professionalism. He is also Chairman of the Dentists Health
Support Programme and Trust.


viii



Contributors

Iain Chapple
BDS FDSRCPS PhD FDSRCS CCST (Rest Dent)

Periodontal Research Group and MRC Centre for
Immune Regulation
School of Dentistry
College of Medical and Dental Sciences
University of Birmingham
Birmingham, UK
Professor Iain Chapple is Head of Periodontology at the University Birmingham’s School of Dentistry and Clinical Lead for an NHS service base of 6
million. He is Associate Editor of Journal of Clinical Periodontology and Periodontology 2000 and former Scientific Editor of the British Dental Journal and
former Associate Editor of Journal of Periodontal Research. President of The
British Society of Periodontology (2014–2015), President of The Periodontal
Research Group of the International Association of Dental Research (2007),
Treasurer and Executive Committee member of the European Federation of
Periodontology (EFP) (2007–2013), EFP Scientific Advisory Committee Chairman (2013–2015), Secretary General (2016–), EFP Workshop Co-Chairman
(2009–current). He has written and edited seven books and 16 book chapters
and published over 140 full papers on Medline. He was awarded the Tomes
Medal by the Royal College of Surgeons of England in 2012.

Fiona Cox
B.Ed MInstLM
Ferndale Dental Clinic Ltd
Devizes, UK

Fiona Cox is co-owner at Ferndale Dental Implant and Cosmetic Clinic. She has
a wide experience in management within the private health sector and the NHS
dental and medical health fields.


Contributors




ix

Martyn Cox
BSc (Hons) BDS MFGDP RCS (Eng) FRSM, PhD
Clinical Director Ferndale Dental Implant Clinic
Implant mentor and tutor Dentale Advanced
Implant course, Honorary Specialist Oral Surgeon,
Solihull Hospital
Lecturer
Martyn Cox is the Clinical Director at Ferndale Dental Implant and Cosmetic
Clinic, Devizes. He is a clinical trainer/lecturer and mentor in Advanced
Implantology in Bristol and Shrewsbury, an Honorary Oral Surgeon at Solihull
Hospital, Birmingham and a lecturer on the FGDP Oral Surgery course. Martyn
has been awarded numerous research prizes in the UK and has published
widely in both UK and international peer-reviewed journals including several
oral cancer textbooks and has lectured on implantology, oral cancer and
human papilloma virus genetics in the UK, Europe and the USA.

Daljit Gill
BDS BSc MSc FDS RCS MOrth FDS (Orth) RCS (Eng)
UCLH Eastman Dental Hospital
London, UK

Dr Daljit Gill is a Consultant Orthodontist at Great Ormond Street NHS Foundation Trust and UCLH Eastman Dental Hospital. He has written a number of
textbooks and is involved in training orthodontists, therapists and nurses.


x




Contributors

Nikos Donos
DDS MS FHEA FDSRCSEngl PhD
Head Centre for Oral Clinical Research
Professor and Chair Periodontology and Implant Dentistry
Honorary Professor, UCL Eastman Dental Institute, UK
Honorary Professor, University of Hong Kong
Honorary Professor, Griffith University, Australia
Centre for Clinical Oral Research
Institute of DentistryBarts and The London School of
Medicine and DentistryQueen Mary University of
London (QMUL)
Awarded the title of Honorary Professor at the Faculty of Dentistry in Hong
Kong (2009) and the title of Adjunct Professor at the Dental School, Griffith
University, Australia (2012), Professor Donos is involved as editorial board
member in a number of international and national peer-reviewed journals in
the field of Periodontology and Implant Dentistry and has published extensively. In 2011, he was awarded the prestigious annual IADR-Periodontology
Group Award in Periodontal Regenerative Medicine. His clinical expertise is in
the field of Periodontics and Implant Dentistry and he has significant experience in periodontal/bone regeneration and implant related surgical procedures
as well as treatment of peri-implantitis, topics which he regularly lectures on
at a national and international level.

David H. Felix
BDS MB ChB FDS RCS (Eng) FDS RCPS (Glasg) FDS
RCS(Ed) FRCP(Ed)
Dean of Postgraduate Dental Education
NHS Education for Scotland

Edinburgh, UK

Dr David H. Felix is Postgraduate Dental Dean, NHS Education for Scotland and
Chair of the Joint Committee for Postgraduate Training in Dentistry. Previously
Consultant in Oral Medicine Glasgow Dental Hospital and School. He is a
former Dean of the Faculty of Dental Surgery of The Royal College of Surgeons
of Edinburgh and a former President of the British Society for Oral Medicine.

Mark Griffiths
MBBS FDS RCS BDS
Visiting Professor, UCL (Eastman Dental Institute);
Honorary Research Fellow, School of Physiology,
Pharmacology and Neuroscience
University of Bristol
Bristol, UK
Mark Griffiths is Visiting Professor, UCL (Eastman Dental Institute), London,
UK and Honorary Research Fellow, School of Physiology, Pharmacology and
Neuroscience at the University of Bristol. He is a retired NHS Consultant in
Special Care Dentistry at the Bristol Dental Hospital. Holder of Patent: Monitoring electrical activity (Electroencephalograph) and Member of University of
Bristol Neuroscience Community.


Contributors



xi

Athanasios Kalantzis
DipDS MFDSRCS MBChB MRCS FRCS (OMF)

Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery Consultant
Central Manchester Foundation Trust
Manchester, UK

After qualifying in Dentistry in Athens, Greece and in Medicine in Sheffield,
UK, Mr Kalantzis trained in Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery at the Oxford University Hospitals and served as Members Representative and Fellows in Training Representative of the British Association of Oral & Maxillofacial Surgeons
as well as Officer of the Junior Trainees Group. He is a member of the Royal
College of Surgeons of England and has taught oral and maxillofacial trainees
for several years. He has presented papers nationally and internationally and
has experience in organizing as well as chairing national and international
conferences.
Mr Kalantzis is co-author of the books Oxford Handbook of Dental Patient Care
2e and the Oxford Specialist Handbook of Medicine and Surgery for Dentists and is
on the Editorial Board of Medical Problems in Dentistry 6e, and is a regular
reviewer for journals such as Oral Oncology and British Journal of Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery.

Tatiana Macfarlane
BSc PhD MICR FHEA
Senior Research Fellow
University of Aberdeen, Dental School
Aberdeen, UK

Dr Tatiana Macfarlane is a Senior Research Fellow at the University of Aberdeen Dental School, UK. She previously worked at the University of Manchester
in England, European Institute of Oncology in Italy and International Agency
for Research of Cancer in France. Her main research interests are in epidemiology of head and neck cancer and oral health epidemiology. She has been
involved in major international collaborations such as Alcohol-related Cancers
and Genetic Susceptibility in Europe (ARCAGE) and International Head and
Neck Cancer Epidemiology Consortium (INHANCE). She is a Fellow of the
Royal Statistical Society (RSS), Fellow of the Institute of Learning and Teaching
in Higher Education (ILTHE), member of the International Epidemiological

Association (IEA), member of the American Association for Cancer Research
(AACR) and professional member of the Institute of Clinical Research (ICR).
She has authored over 120 peer-reviewed papers.


xii



Contributors

Avril Macpherson
BDS (Edin) FDS RCSEd MFDS RCSEd MSND RCSEd
DipConSed (N’castle) PGCTLCP (Edgehill) FHEA
Clinical Director
Liverpool University, Dental Hospital
Liverpool, UK

Avril Macpherson was appointed Consultant/Honorary Senior Clinical Lecturer in Special Care Dentistry, Liverpool University Dental Hospital and School
of Dentistry, in 2010. She is a member of the British Society of Disability and
Oral Health Executive Committee, the Specialty Advisory Committee in Special
Care Dentistry (RCSEng), the Specialty Advisory Board in Oral Medicine and
Special Care Dentistry (RCSEd) and is a Regional Specialty Advisor in Special
Care Dentistry (RCSEng). Avril teaches widely in conscious sedation and special
care dentistry and is a member of teaching faculty of the Society for the
Advancement of Anaesthesia in Dentistry and a Resuscitation Council
Advanced Life Support instructor. She is a RCSEd examiner for MFDS and
MSCD examinations.

Jasmine Murphy

BDS (Hons) MSt (Camb) MFGDP UK MFDS RCS (Edin)
MFDS RCS (Eng) MRes (Manc) FDS RCS (Eng) FFPH
Consultant in Public Health (Children and Young
People, Sexual Health, Dental Public Health)
Leicester City Council
Leicester, UK
Jasmine Murphy is a Consultant in Public Health at Leicester City Council and
registered as a Specialist in Dental Public Health with the General Dental
Council. Children in Leicester have been reported to have the worst level of
dental health in England and therefore Jasmine established the Oral Health
Promotion Partnership Board and is driving forward the implementation and
mobilization of Leicester’s first Oral Health Promotion Strategy for pre-school
children. Leicester’s dental public health programme ‘Healthy Teeth, Happy
Smiles!’ is an early intervention programme that is modelled on Scotland’s
ChildSmile. Jasmine also contributed to Public Health England’s ‘Commissioning Better Oral Health’ guidance, is a core member of the National Institute
of Health and Care Excellence (NICE) Public Health Advisory Committee
and is also currently contributing to NHS England’s Commissioning Guide on
Paediatric Dentistry. Jasmine has also recently been invited to join the Editorial
Board of Oral Diseases journal.


Contributors



xiii

Farhad B. Naini
BDS (Guy’s) MSc (Lond) PhD (KCL) FDSRCS (Eng)
MOrthRCS (Eng) FDSOrth.RCS (Eng) GCAP(KCL) FHEA

Consultant Orthodontist
Maxillofacial Unit
Kingston Hospital and St George’s Hospital
London, UK
Dr Naini is the Consultant Orthodontist in the Maxillofacial Units at Kingston
Hospital and St George’s Hospital, Chair of the multidisciplinary Cranio-OrbitoFacial Surgery Group and Research Lead for Dentistry and Orthognathic
Surgery. He has over 80 peer-reviewed publications and is editor of major
textbooks on orthodontics and orthognathic surgery. He is also author of the
reference textbook Facial aesthetics: concepts and clinical diagnosis.

Tim Newton
BA PhD CPsychol AFBPsS CSci
Unit of Social and Behavioural Sciences
King’s College London, Dental Institute
Guy’s Hospital
London, UK

Professor of Psychology as Applied to Dentistry and Honorary Consultant
Health Psychologist at King’s College London Dental Institute, Tim has worked
in the behavioural sciences in relation to dentistry for over 20 years, and his
particular interests include the management of dental anxiety, interventions
to enhance oral health related behaviour and the working life of the dental
team. He has published over 250 peer-reviewed articles in scientific journals.

Paul P. Nixon
BDS FDSRCS (Eng) DDRRCR
Consultant in Maxillofacial Radiology
School of Dentistry
Liverpool University, Dental Hospital
Liverpool, UK


Paul Nixon is Consultant in Maxillofacial Radiology in Royal Liverpool University Hospital, clinical lead in the Dental Radiology Department and is also a
specialist in Oral Surgery. He is an honorary clinical lecturer of the University
of Liverpool and has an honorary contract at Alder Hey Children’s Hospital.
He has authored or coauthored 26 publications. He is on the council of the
British Society of Dental and Maxillofacial Radiology where he is audit lead and
is responsible for their website. He recently served as external examiner for the
MSc in Maxillofacial radiology at King’s College London for 6 years, is an
examiner for the MJDF examination of the Royal College of Surgeons of
England and is a member of the Royal College of Radiologists.


xiv



Contributors

Will Palin
BMedSc MPhil PhD FADM
Biomaterials Unit, The School of Dentistry
College of Medical and Dental Sciences
University of Birmingham
Birmingham, UK

Will Palin is a Reader in Biomaterials at the School of Dentistry, University of
Birmingham. With a background in materials science, his developmental
research for both dental and wider medical applications has attracted grant
funding from the EPSRC, BBSRC, NIHR, Ministry of Defence and various industrial partners. He has authored over 70 publications and six book chapters. He
is Editor of the European Journal of Prosthodontics and Restorative Dentistry,

Subject Editor for Biomaterials Adhesion, International Journal of Adhesion and
Adhesives and Board Member for Journal of Biomaterials Applications, Dental
Materials and Journal of Dentistry.

Andrew Paterson
LLM BDS (Hons) FDSRCPS DRDRCS (Edin) MRDRCS (Edin)
Consultant in Restorative Dentistry, NHS Ayrshire and
Arran;
Honorary Clinical Senior Lecturer, University of
Glasgow;
Maxillofacial Unit
The University Hospital Crosshouse
Kilmarnock, UK
Andrew Paterson is a Consultant in Restorative Dentistry mainly involved in
the prosthodontic management of head and neck cancer, trauma and hypodontia patients in a District General Hospital. Formerly an NHS Consultant at
Glasgow Dental Hospital with 20 years’ experience in a private specialist restorative and prosthodontics referral practice dealing with all aspects of restorative
dentistry. Part-time associate dento-legal adviser with an indemnity insurer.
Contributor to all previous editions of this textbook.

Crispian Scully
CBE PhD MD MDS MRCS FDSRCPS FFDRCSI FDSRCS
FDSRCSE FRCPath FmedSci FHEA FUCL FSB DSc DChD
DMed (HC) Dr HC
Emeritus Professor
University College London
London, UK
Professor Crispian Scully is a Director of the WHO Collaborating Centre in
Oral Health-General Health; journal Founder and Editor of Oral Oncology and
Oral Diseases; and author or editor of 50 books, 200 book chapters and over
1000 papers on MEDLINE. He is UCL Professor Emeritus, has been Dean at UCL

and Bristol, and president of several international and UK societies and has
medals from Universities of Helsinki, Santiago de Compostela and Granada;
Fellowship of UCL; and Doctorates from Universities of Athens, Granada, Helsinki and Pretoria.


Contributors



xv

John C. Steele
MB ChB BDS MFDS RCSEd FDS (OM) RCSEd Dip Oral
Med PGCTLCP FHEA
Consultant and Specialist in Oral Medicine
The Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust;
Honorary Senior Lecturer in Oral Medicine
Faculty of Medicine & Health
University of Leeds
Leeds, UK
Dr John C. Steele is dual qualified in both medicine and dentistry and is currently Consultant, Honorary Senior Lecturer and Specialist in Oral Medicine
based in Leeds. He has previously worked in a number of medical and surgical
posts including emergency medicine. He has co-authored 14 articles published
in peer-reviewed journals and has reviewed manuscripts for five national and
international dental and medical journals. He is a current member of Council
of the British Society for Oral Medicine.

Damien Walmsley
PhD MSc BDS FDSRCPS
The School of Dentistry

College of Medical and Dental Sciences
University of Birmingham
Birmingham, UK

Professor Walmsley is a recognised both for his research and teaching. His
research is on the the use of ultrasonics in dentistry including its use in periodontology, endodontics and its healing effects in repairing teeth. His present
research funding includes imaging biofilm and observing its real time removal
via ultrasonic instruments. He is very active in Interdisciplinary doctoral training centres at the University of Birmingham and is Graduate Director for
Dentistry. He publishes his work in high impact scientific journals which has
resulted in research and advisory roles for all the major dental companies. He
is a well respected educator in Prosthodontics and also contributes to courses
on Information Technology and Law/ethics courses. Clinically his work evolves
around Prosthodontics and he is the leader of a busy NHS department. He is
Scientific Advisor to the British Dental Association and enjoys a high profile in
the media. He is a past President of the British Prosthodontic Society. International roles include Past President of the Association for Dental Education in
Europe and deputy chair of U21 Health Sciences. Editorial duties include past
Editor of the Journal of Dentistry and he is on the Editorial boards of the BDJ,
European Journal of Dental Education, Journal of Dental Education, Journal
of Endodontics. European Journal of Restorative Dentistry and Dental Update.


xvi



Contributors

Richard Welbury
Professor of Paediatric Dentistry
School of Dentistry

University of Central Lancashire
Preston, UK

Richard Welbury is Professor of Paediatric Dentistry at the University of
Glasgow Dental School and currently Dean of the Dental Faculty and VicePresident of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow.

Paul H.R. Wilson
BSc BDS MSc FDSRCPS FDS(RestDent) DipDSed
Consultant in Restorative Dentistry
Oxford University Hospitals NHS
Foundation Trust, Headington, Oxford UK
The Circus Dental Practice
Bath, UK
Paul H.R. Wilson is Consultant in Restorative Dentistry at Oxford University
Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and he works in private specialist dental practice in Bath. He is visiting Senior Clinical Lecturer at the Universities of Aberdeen and Bristol. He completed postgraduate training at Guy’s & St Thomas’
Hospitals, London and King’s College London.

Graeme Wright
BDS FDS(Paed Dent) RCPSG MPaed Dent RCSEd
PGCLTHE FHEA
Consultant in Paediatric Dentistry
Royal Hospital for Sick Children
Edinburgh, UK

Graeme Wright is Consultant in Paediatric Dentistry at Edinburgh Royal
Hospital for Sick Children. He is an Executive Board member of BSPD, organizer
of the IAPD 2015 International Congress and editorial board member of
‘Dental Traumatology’. His sub-specialty interests are Dental Traumatology
and Oncology/Haematology related to dentistry.



Contents

Preface to the Fourth Edition
Contributors

  1. Dental public health, epidemiology and prevention
Tatiana Macfarlane, Jasmine Murphy

v
vii

1

  2. Social and psychological aspects of dental care
Tim Newton

27

  3. Dental disease
Crispian Scully

39

  4. The dental team
Crispian Scully, John Cameron

71

  5. Law, ethics and quality dental care

John Cameron

93

  6. Practice management
Fiona Cox, Martyn Cox

121

  7. History and examination
Mark Griffiths

167

  8. Dental and maxillofacial radiology
Paul Nixon

175

  9. Pain and anxiety management
Avril Macpherson

201

10. Drug prescribing and therapeutics
Mark Griffiths

223

11. Dental materials

William Palin, Damien Walmsley

237


xviii



Contents

12. Implantology
Stephen Barter, Nikos Donos

269

13. Oral medicine
David H. Felix

289

14. Oral and maxillofacial surgery
Athanasios Kalantzis

337

15. Orthodontics
Daljit Gill, Farhad Naini

391


16. Paediatric dentistry
Graeme Wright, Richard Welbury

429

17. Periodontology
Iain Chapple

461

18. Removable prosthodontics
Andrew Paterson

475

19. Operative dentistry
Paul H.R. Wilson

513

20. Special care dentistry
Avril Macpherson

577

21. Emergencies
John Steele

621


Appendices
Appendix A: Average dates of mineralization and eruption
of the primary dentition
Appendix B: Tooth notation
Appendix C: Tooth eruption

637

Index

643

638
640
640


Dental public health,
epidemiology 
and prevention
Dental public health  1
Oral health epidemiology  3
The prevention of oral diseases  4
The wider determinants of
health  5
Oral health promotion  6
Common risk factors  6
Barriers to healthy behaviours  7
Changing disease levels  8

Caries risk  9
Diet and dental caries  10
Fluoride  12
Modes of action  12
Smoking and oral health  16
Smokeless tobacco and oral
health  17
Electronic cigarettes and oral
health  18

1 

Hookah (shisha) and oral health  19
Alcohol consumption and oral
health  19
Other substance abuse and oral
health  21
HIV infection and oral health  21
Prevention of dental neglect  22
Sport trauma  23
Temporomandibular disorders  23
Frequency of dental attendance  23
Routine scale and polish  23
Prevention in older patients  24
Pregnancy and oral health  25
Oral health in special population
groups  25
Conclusion  26

Dental public health

Definition

This is a non-clinical specialty involving the science and art of preventing oral
diseases, promoting oral health to the population rather than the individual.
It involves the assessment of dental health needs, developing policy and
strategy and ensuring appropriate dental health services to meet the needs
of the population.

Dental Public Health (DPH) is concerned with the oral health of a
population rather than individuals and has been defined as the
science and art of preventing oral diseases, promoting oral health
and improving the quality of life through the organized efforts of
society. Dental public health practice requires an understanding of
the challenges in the delivery, planning and management of health
services in order to ensure that the provision of health services meets
the needs of the population. This dental specialty requires specific
skills in undertaking oral health needs assessments and developing
specific oral health policies and strategies that protect and promote


2



C L I N I C A L D E N T I S T RY

population level oral health. It also involves a comprehensive understanding and appreciation of the principles and methods that underpin oral health promotion, oral health inequalities, the wider
determinants of health and health behaviour.
Oral health has improved in the UK over the last 30 years, but there
is evidence that inequalities have widened. With limited funding and

the ever-growing evidence base for interventions, dental public
health specialists must make decisions, develop policies and implement strategies that are based on the best available scientific evidence
in order to meet oral health goals, reduce oral health inequalities and
sustain necessary resources. Such activities also involve the systematic use of data and information systems, application of programme
planning frameworks, engagement with the communities in the
decision-making process, conducting sound evaluation and disseminating lessons that have been learnt.
The evidence-based decision-making process which is applied
in dental public health integrates best available research evidence,
practitioner expertise and other available resources including the
characteristics, needs, values and preferences of those who will
be affected by the intervention. Once health needs are identified
through a community assessment, the scientific literature can identify programmes and policies that have been effective in addressing
those needs. However, the amount of available evidence can be
overwhelming.
There are many types of evidence (e.g. randomized controlled
trials, cohort studies, qualitative research) and the best type of evidence depends on the question being asked. Not all types of evidence
(e.g. qualitative research) are equally represented in reviews and
guidelines. The concept of a ‘hierarchy of evidence’ can be problematic when appraising the evidence for public health interventions
as not all populations, settings and health issues are necessarily
represented in evidence-based guidelines and/or systematic reviews.
An important objective for those engaged in evidence-based dental
public health is to improve the quality, availability and use of evidence in public health decision-making. The wide-scale implementation of evidence-based dental public health requires not only a
workforce that understands and can implement the evidence base for
dental public health efficiently but also sustained support from health
department leaders, practitioners and policy makers.
Evidence-based practice guidelines are based on systematic reviews
and/or meta-analyses of research-tested interventions and can help
practitioners select interventions for implementation.




Systematic reviews use explicit methods that focus on a particular
research question which locates and critically appraises all high
quality research evidence relevant to that question. They result


Dental public health, epidemiology and prevention



3

in 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 is a statistical technique to combine pertinent data
from several studies to develop a single conclusion that has
greater statistical power. The benefits of meta-analysis include a
consolidated and quantitative review of the large, complex and
sometimes conflicting body of literature.
The Cochrane Library () is an
online collection of databases that contain different types of highquality, independent evidence to inform healthcare decision-making.
The Centre for Evidence-based Dentistry (CEBD; )
sets out an approach to systematizing the evidence for different
research questions, with the highest level of evidence being systematic reviews and randomized clinical trials, with case series and
expert opinion as the lowest level of evidence.
To find evidence tailored to their own context, practitioners may
need to search resources that contain original data and analysis.
Peer-reviewed research articles, conference proceedings and technical reports can be found for example in PubMed (i
.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed). Maintained by the US National Library of

Medicine, PubMed is the largest and most widely available bibliographic database of biomedical literature.

Oral health epidemiology
Epidemiology, which is defined as the study of disease distribution
and its determinants in specified populations, is the basic science of
public health because it studies the patterns, causes and effects of
health and disease conditions in human populations. It is the cornerstone of public health and informs policy decisions and evidencebased practice by identifying risk factors for disease and targets for
preventive health care. Furthermore, epidemiology has been used to
generate much of the information required by public health professionals to develop, implement and evaluate effective intervention
programmes for the prevention of disease and promotion of health,
such as the eradication of smallpox, the anticipated eradication of
poliomyelitis, and prevention of diphtheria, tetanus, measles, meningitis and mumps, heart disease and cancer. The ‘art’ of epidemiology
is knowing when and how to apply the various epidemiological strategies to answer specific health questions. Such designs include
descriptive epidemiological studies (such as cross-sectional or
surveys) and analytical (such as cohort studies, case-control studies
and randomized clinical trials).


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C L I N I C A L D E N T I S T RY

Dental caries is a public health concern and collecting data on its
prevalence, incidence and trends is an important field in oral health
epidemiology. Definitions used include:




Prevalence: the proportion of individuals with disease (cases) in
a population at a specific point in time.
• Incidence: the number or proportion of individuals in a population who experience new disease during a specific time period.
• Trend: the changes or differences in the prevalence or incidence
of disease with respect to time.

The prevention of oral diseases
The major oral diseases – dental caries, periodontal disease and
mouth cancer (see Chapter 3) – are not inevitable, but are to a large
extent influenced by the wider determinants of health, i.e. psychosocial, economic, political, environmental, social and lifestyle factors.
The aetiology of these conditions is increasingly well understood and
prevention is largely possible if appropriate policies and strategies are
in place which influence or assist people in adopting appropriate
changes in behaviour.
Prevention is defined in three stages:
prevention – steps taken to ensure disease does not occur
• Primary
• Secondary prevention – promoting early intervention in those already
affected to halt progression at incipient stage of disease
• Tertiary prevention – treatment of well-established disease to restore
function and avoid further episodes

The prevention of oral diseases can also be regarded as measures
applied either on a population basis, or at an individual level. Examples
of measures applied on a population basis include water fluoridation
and health promotion campaigns. Preventive measures on an individual basis can be applied either by a dental professional (e.g. fluoride varnish, fissure sealants, diet counselling, smoking cessation) or
by the individual, e.g. tooth-brushing.
In the developed world, dentistry has traditionally taken a
‘treatment-oriented’ approach, with the view that individuals were
reliant on dental professionals for maintenance of oral health, but

recent decades have seen a change to a more ‘preventive-oriented’
approach. Factors influencing this transition include:



increased understanding of the nature of dental caries, periodontal disease and other oral diseases
• increased appreciation of the shortcomings of traditional restorative dentistry


Dental public health, epidemiology and prevention




increased evidence based on preventative approaches
changing aspirations of patients (perhaps of
importance).



5

greatest

The wider determinants of health
Oral health and general health are determined by a complex interaction between individual characteristics, lifestyle and the physical,
social and economic environment. People living in poorer areas tend
to have worse oral and general health when compared to those living
in more affluent areas. Given the close links between oral health and
other indicators such as family income, there is increasing pressure

to tackle the wider social determinants of health through the implementation of appropriate interventions. The wider social determinants of health (Figure 1.1) are the circumstances in which people
are born, grow up, live, work, and age. These circumstances are in
turn shaped by a wider set of forces: economics, social policies and
politics.
Oral health inequalities are the ‘differences in oral health status
between different population groups’. Inequalities in oral health exist
between social classes, countries within the United Kingdom and
among certain minority ethnic and population groups. Oral health
inequalities can only be reduced through the implementation of
effective and appropriate oral health promotion policies and strategies which tackle the wider social determinants of health. The

General socioeconomic,
cultural and environmental conditions
Living and working
conditions
Social and
community networks
Individual
lifestyle factors






Work environment
Unemployment
Education
Healthcare services


Individuals
(age, gender and
genetic factors)

• Housing
• Water and sanitation
• Agriculture and food
production

Figure 1.1  Determinants of health (based on Dahlgren G & Whitehead M 1991
Policies and strategies to promote social equity in health. Institute for Future
Studies, Stockholm (Mimeo).


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C L I N I C A L D E N T I S T RY

improvements in oral health over the last 30 years have been largely
a result of fluoride toothpaste and social, economic and environmental factors.

Oral health promotion
Health promotion is the process of enabling people to increase control
over, and to improve their health (World Health Organization
[WHO]). It moves beyond a focus on individual behaviour towards a
wide range of social and environmental interventions. Health promotion describes activities and actions designed to enhance positive
health and prevent ill-health by a combination of prevention, health
education and health protection. There are a number of approaches

that can be chosen when planning an oral health promotion initiative including: settings (e.g. nurseries, schools, care homes), population group (e.g. children, pregnant women, adults, vulnerable
groups) and topic based (e.g. dental caries, periodontal disease, oral
cancer).
Prevention.  Described above.
Health education.  Any combination of learning experiences
designed to help individuals and communities improve their health
by increasing their knowledge or influencing their attitudes (WHO).
It involves the provision of information aimed at influencing beliefs,
attitudes and behaviour relating to oral and dental health. In its
widest sense, it also includes provision of information about access
to and appropriate use of health services.
The key messages for oral health (see Chapter 3) are: reduce the
intake of sugar-containing food and drink, particularly the frequency
of sugar consumption and avoid between-meal sugar snacks; brush
teeth twice daily with a toothpaste containing fluoride; attend the
dentist regularly; do not use tobacco; reduce alcohol consumption.
Health protection.  The practice of a nation to protect, improve and
restore health of individuals in a community or entire populations.
It functions through collective societal activities, programmes, services and institutions aimed at improving health of people. It comprises laws, regulations, policies and voluntary codes of practice
aimed at preventing disease and enhancing health, e.g. legislation
making use of car seat-belts compulsory, thereby reducing the prevalence of maxillofacial injuries due to road traffic accidents.

Common risk factors
Traditionally, there has been an emphasis on dental health education, either with individuals or groups, which has focused on imparting knowledge. It has been shown that conventional oral health


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