c ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci ck cl cm cn co cp cr cs ct cu cw cy cz

Перевод: caries speek caries


[существительное]
кариес ; кариоз ; костоеда


Тезаурус:

  1. During the early Anglo-Saxon period a diet having a' coarse physical consistency' resulted in a lower incidence of dental caries compared with modern populations.
  2. Of special significance, Mark Spencer Larsen of southeastern Massachusetts has discovered that it was the females who showed the most marked increase in dental caries.
  3. As caries sets in at a weak point in the tooth's enamel and spreads to rot the whole tooth, so an appeal to the crown could trigger the decay of local autonomy.
  4. The reason for the different incidence of caries between the sexes, Larsen suggests, lies in the sexual division of labour prevalent then in Georgia and in many other past and present human societies.
  5. It is sensible therefore that the health departments should give priority for new schemes to areas such as the north west of England and the west of Scotland where the prevalence of dental caries remains high and where large water treatment works allow for economies of scale.
  6. The Terminal Hater: A pair of charming, morally upright and brilliant scientists - one male, one female - discover that computers running MS-DOS and Windows cause dental caries.
  7. The prevalence of dental caries has fallen in both fluoridated and non-fluoridated districts, and the costs of fluoridation plant designed to meet modern operating standards are considerable.
  8. In a prehistoric population in North America the time when marked tooth decay (dental caries) set in has been pinpointed to around 1150 AD.
  9. The dentist recording the dental condition of both the women from Anglesey and the control group from the non-fluoridated Gwynedd mainland was blind to women's residential status; those living in the fluoridated area had 30% fewer caries.
  10. Contrary to the official establishment line on fluoride, this substance has never been shown to be essential for body function, and its role in protecting teeth from dental caries is extremely doubtful.
  11. Dental caries and gum ( periodontal ) infections.
  12. If they are not used in the way nature intended they become more subject to dental disease and caries; chewing fibre-rich foods helps to keep the teeth cleaner and free of plaque in a variety of different ways.
  13. Consequently they received more protein-rich and less carbohydrate-rich food in their diet and suffered less from dental caries than the females did in the period Larsen studied.

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