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Journal of Dental Research, Vol 68, 1513-1518, Copyright © 1989 by International & American Associations for Dental Research Online Journals


ARTICLES

Differences in the rate of molar wear between monkeys raised on different diets

M. F. Teaford and O. J. Oyen
Department of Cell Biology & Anatomy, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21205.

The purpose of this study was to make detailed comparisons of rates and patterns of tooth wear in 15 growing vervet monkeys raised on hard vs. soft diets. Dental impressions were taken every six to eight weeks over a four-year period. Cusp heights and areas of dentin exposure on the buccal cusps of the left mandibular first molar were measured from high-resolution epoxy casts, by use of a Reflex Measuring Microscope. Areas of dentin exposure were regressed against time (by use of least-squares regression) so that the course of tooth wear in animals from both diet groups could be charted. By use of a two-sample t test and the Mann-Whitney test, slopes of the regressions and changes in cusp height were compared between diet groups. In both comparisons, animals raised on the hard diet showed more rapid tooth wear than did animals raised on the soft diet. Analyses of other parameters indicate that this was probably because of differences in dietary consistency between the two groups.


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