3 results match your criteria: "The University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center College of Dentistry[Affiliation]"
Glob Health Res Policy
September 2024
Division of Global Health Equity, Brigham and Women's Hospital, 641 Huntington Ave, Boston, MA, 02115, USA.
Background: Low-income countries bear a growing and disproportionate burden of oral diseases. With the World Health Organization targeting universal oral health coverage by 2030, assessing the state of oral health coverage in these resource-limited nations becomes crucial. This research seeks to examine the political and resource commitments to oral health, along with the utilization rate of oral health services, across 27 low-income countries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNanomaterials (Basel)
June 2020
Department of Restorative Sciences, The University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center College of Dentistry, Division of Dental Biomaterials 1201 N. Stonewall Ave., Oklahoma, OK 73117, USA.
In this study, six solvents (water, diiodomethane, bromonaphthalene, formamide, ethanol and ethylene glycol) were examined for three nanoparticle substrates, zinc oxide and titanium dioxide (21 nm and 100 nm), with the goal of assessing the suitability of a modified drop penetration method (DPM) for orders of magnitude smaller particles. Nanoparticles were compressed into flat discs and the solvent dropped on the surface while the image with time was recorded. Contact angles were in reasonable agreement with literature over the range of 20-80°, but failed to provide acceptable results for surface energy components.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Dent
July 2019
Graduate Program in Dentistry, Universidade Positivo, Rua Professor Pedro Viriato Parigot de Souza, 5300, Cidade Industrial, Curitiba, PR, Brazil.
Gingivitis is still considered a major risk factor for the occurrence and progression of periodontal disease. The aim of the present study was to compare the long-term (1, 12, and 18 weeks) antiplaque and antigingivitis efficacies of two commercially available toothpastes, Colgate Total (CT) and BlueM (BM), against attached supragingival dental plaque and gingival inflammation in an experimental gingivitis model. A parallel double-blinded randomized clinical trial including 39 dental students who refrained from all plaque control methods (manual or chemical) for 7 days was conducted.
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