It has been proposed that the so-called intact surface zone of carious lesions of enamel could restrict the ingress of mineral ions and hinder remineralisation. The present study was intended to determine the role of organic (proteinaceous) material in restricting the movement of mineral ions into carious lesions in vitro. Natural carious lesion surfaces were divided into two halves. The experimental half was de-proteinised using hypochlorite, the control half remained untreated. The whole tooth was exposed to 45Ca in solution, and 45Ca uptake into experimental and control tissue was measured by image analysis of autoradiographs prepared from lesion sections. The results indicated that uptake was improved by removal of organic material.
Developing permanent teeth of different ages were obtained from Danish Landrace pigs. Visibly distinct zones on their enamel surfaces were shown to correspond to changes in chemical composition previously reported for other species. The time of appearance, rate of progress and duration of each stage was determined for each tooth type.
Calcium, phosphorus and protein analyses have been performed on developing permanent enamel from the mandibular dentition of the domestic pig. The pattern of mineralization and protein loss was similar from tooth to tooth and similar to teeth from other species. Comparison of different teeth at the same developmental stages (secretion – stage 1, transition – stage 2 and maturation – stage 3) revealed remarkably similar concentrations of calcium, phosphorus, and protein regardless of tooth type. These data were similar to those from other deciduous dentitions, except that maturing/mature tissue in the pig seemed less well mineralized.
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