1990
DOI: 10.1177/10454411900010020301
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Historical Perspectives of Oral Biology: A Series

Abstract: From antiquity, individuals, tribes, and cultures have sought the abilities of singular individuals to try to heal them or to help them to endure the onslaughts of disease. For thousands of years before recorded history, these services were provided by the medicine man or shaman of the tribe, whose secret treatments were passed from generation to generation by the apprenticeship methods of teaching. For the most part, their therapies were at best palliative and their effects were placebo and psychological in n… Show more

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Cited by 34 publications
(33 citation statements)
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“…The beginning of rice cultivation in South Asia also believed to have caused an increase in caries. The earliest theory was the "tooth worm theory" proposed by the ancient Chinese in 2500 BC, where it posited a tooth worm as the cause of this rottenness [18][19][20][21]. In 350 BC Aristotle observed figs and sweets caused tooth decay and by the 12 th century, caries was described as the condition of having holes in the teeth or cavities.…”
Section: Definitionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The beginning of rice cultivation in South Asia also believed to have caused an increase in caries. The earliest theory was the "tooth worm theory" proposed by the ancient Chinese in 2500 BC, where it posited a tooth worm as the cause of this rottenness [18][19][20][21]. In 350 BC Aristotle observed figs and sweets caused tooth decay and by the 12 th century, caries was described as the condition of having holes in the teeth or cavities.…”
Section: Definitionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is a lesion located at the margin of a dental restoration which [20]. characterizes a caries lesion adjacent to the margin with signs of demineralisation (wall lesions) alongside the cavity wall which could be outcome of micro leakage.…”
Section: Secondary Cariesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Archaeological evidence shows that tooth decay is an ancient disease dating far back into prehistory (Suddick and Harris, 1990). Interestingly, studies by Moore and Corbett of the dentition of Britons in various periods demonstrated that, until about 1850, caries occurred relatively infrequently; after 1850, coinciding with the increasing availability of cane sugar and refined flour, there has been an explosive increase in dental caries lesions (Nikiforuk, 1985).…”
Section: Revealing the Infectious Nature Of Dental Caries And Periodomentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Interestingly, studies by Moore and Corbett of the dentition of Britons in various periods demonstrated that, until about 1850, caries occurred relatively infrequently; after 1850, coinciding with the increasing availability of cane sugar and refined flour, there has been an explosive increase in dental caries lesions (Nikiforuk, 1985). Even from ancient time, long before the visual observation of microorganism, people had suspected the possible causative link between certain form of living organism-described as "tooth worm" in a Sumerian text about 5000 BC, and dental caries (Suddick and Harris, 1990). However, the revelation of the true identity of "tooth worms" had to wait for another 6000 years.…”
Section: Revealing the Infectious Nature Of Dental Caries And Periodomentioning
confidence: 99%
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