Journal Notice: Call for papers for the Special issue: Probe - Dentistry

 

Probe - Dentistry is a peer-reviewed journal that publishes original research articles, review articles, and clinical studies in all areas of dentistry, including periodontal diseases, dental implants, oral pathology, as well as oral and maxillofacial surgery.

The lead Guest editors

Manjima Sasisdharan

 
Posted: 2019-03-25 More...
 

Journal Notice: Call for Papers for the Special Issue: Irrigation in Endodontics

 

Probe-Dentistry is a peer-reviewed journal that publishes original research articles, review articles, and clinical studies in all areas of dentistry, including periodontal diseases, dental implants, oral pathology, as well as oral and maxillofacial surgery. Probe - Dentistry provides permanent archiving for electronic scholarly journals. It operates a fully open access publishing model which allows open global access to its published content.

The Lead Guest Editor

Rupika Gogna

 
Posted: 2019-03-23 More...
 

Journal Notice: Call for papers for the Special issue: Probe dentistry

 

Probe dentistry provides excellent platform to the young and dynamic scientists to share their knowledge and research.

The very whole purpose of a journal is to make people aware about the recent scientific updates in the field and probe dentistry is doing it successfully.

The lead Guest editors

Kunal Nischal

 
Posted: 2019-03-21 More...
 

Journal Notice: Call for papers for the Special issue: Probe-Dentistry

 

Dentistry is an ever changing field with lots of newer advances in different specialist.The goal of this special issue is to provide dentists with information related to current developments in dentistry.we encourage clinicians and research oriented academic professionals to submit manuscripts in all disciplines of dentistry.

The lead Guest editors

Sanjay Prasad Gupta

 
Posted: 2019-03-20 More...
 

Journal Notice: Call for papers for the Special issue:Current trends in Dentistry

 

Probe - Dentistry is a peer-reviewed journal that publishes original research articles, review articles, and clinical studies in all areas of dentistry, including periodontal diseases, dental implants, oral pathology, as well as oral and maxillofacial surgery.

The lead Guest editors

Sanjay Prasad Gupta

 
Posted: 2019-03-19 More...
 

Journal News: Publisher’s Note

 

We are pleased at the constructive and collaborative manner in which we were able to work with the Editorial Board Member. We appreciate those of scholars who help and surpport us running the Journal. We are reaching primary goal of launching journal, we hope our scholars will continue to pay attention and participate enthusiastically, and submit some high quanlity papers to our Journal. Thank you!

 
Posted: 2018-09-14
 

Research News: Household environment, not genetics, shapes salivary microbes

 

Researchers in the United Kingdom have discovered that the mix of microorganisms that inhabit a person's saliva are largely determined by the human host's household. The study, published this week in mBio®, an open-access journal of the American Society for Microbiology, shows that early environmental influences play a far larger role than human genetics in shaping the salivary microbiome -- the group of organisms that play a crucial role in oral and overall health.

"It's generally becoming known that there's a link between our microbiomes and our health and that's reason enough to find out what's in there, how they arrived there, and what they are doing," says Adam P. Roberts, senior lecturer in antimicrobial chemotherapy and resistance at the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine. Roberts co-led the study, which was conducted during his previous post at the UCL Eastman Dental Institute. UCL Genetics Institute graduate student Liam Shaw adds, "The oral cavity is naturally colonized by hundreds of bacterial species, which stop external pathogens from establishing a foothold, but they also can themselves cause oral disease."

 
Posted: 2018-09-12
 

Research News: Research on British teeth unlocks potential for new insights into ancient diets

 

Goofy, yellow and crooked: British smiles have sometimes had a less-than-flattering international image, but a new study has put tartar from our infamously bad teeth to good use.

Researchers analysing the teeth of Britons from the Iron Age to the modern day have unlocked the potential for using proteins in tooth tartar to reveal what our ancestors ate.

Dental plaque accumulates on the surface of teeth during life and is mineralised by components of saliva to form tartar or "dental calculus," entombing proteins from the food we eat in the process.

Identifying evidence of many foods, particularly plant crops, in diets of the past is a challenge as they often leave no trace in the archaeological record. But proteins are robust molecules that can survive in tartar for thousands of years.

 
Posted: 2018-09-12
 

Research News: What Anglo Saxon teeth can tell us about modern health

 

Evidence from the teeth of Anglo Saxon children could help identify modern children most at risk from conditions such as obesity, diabetes and heart disease.

Researchers from the University of Bradford found that analysis of milk teeth of children's skeletons from a 10th Century site in Northamptonshire, England, gave a more reliable indicator of the effects of diet and health than bone.

The study, published today, 6 September 2018, in the American Journal of Physical Anthropology, shows that by analysing dentine from the milk teeth of the Anglo Saxon children, a picture emerges of the development of these children from the third trimester of pregnancy onwards, and is a proxy indicator of the health of the mothers. This is the first time that secure in utero data has been measured.

 
Posted: 2018-09-12
 
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