Dentin dysplasia type II only affects the teeth.
Middle or the second layer is known as Dentin.
Over time,
decay reaches the tooth's inner layer, called the Dentin.
As more tertiary Dentin is produced, the size of the pulp decreases.
In healthy teeth, porous tissue called Dentin is protected by your gums
Once the Dentin decays and a cavity starts to form,
professional treatment is necessary.
Bacteria can penetrate the enamel to reach Dentin, but then the outer surface may remineralize,
This is when decay has made holes
in a tooth's enamel but has not yet reached the Dentin.
When examining the probe,
soreness is revealed when the area where enamel and Dentin are combined is affected.
In healthy teeth, porous tissue called Dentin is protected by your gums
and your teeth' s hard enamel shell.
If the odontoblasts survive long enough to react to the dental caries,
then the Dentin produced is called"reactionary" Dentin.
Bacteria can penetrate the enamel to reach Dentin, but then the outer surface may remineralize,
especially if fluoride is present.
The enamel, Dentin, and pulp of teeth are affected,
to the extent that the affected teeth do not develop properly.
In Dentin from the deepest layer to the enamel, the distinct areas affected by caries are the advancing front,
But the main portion of the tooth, the Dentin, is the part that's responsible for your tooth color-- whether
white, off white, grey, or yellowish.
But the primary portion of the tooth, the Dentin, is the part that's responsible for your tooth color-
whether white, off white, grey, or yellow-colored.
All layers of pigmented and softened Dentin are removed from the walls of the cavity,
since it is from there that toxic substances enter the pulp.
But the main part of the tooth, the Dentin, is the part that's responsible for your tooth color such as-
whether white, off white, Grey, or yellowish.
When this protection is lost, microscopic holes in the Dentin called tubules,
allow heat, cold and other irritants to be transmitted back to the tooth nerve triggering pain.
I recently used a laser to remove decay in three teeth for a patient- years
ago that would have meeant reducing 40 percent of their enamel and Dentin.".
In Dentin from the deepest layer to the enamel, the distinct areas affected by caries are the advancing front,
the zone of bacterial penetration, and the zone of destruction.
When you don't have a lot of enamel or the enamel is worn away, you go to the next layer,
which is called the Dentin- and that in itself is actually very yellow,” she says.
Dr. Miller stated in 1887 that"Dental decay is chemico-parasitic process consisting of two stages, the decalcification of enamel,
which results in its total destruction and the decalcification of Dentin as a preliminary stage followed by dissolution of the softened residue.".