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                            |  Tooth Decay begins when the protein of 
                              your saliva combines with the sugars and carbohydrates 
                              of food particles left on and between your teeth. 
                              This combination creates bacteria-laden plaque, 
                              from which acid is produced that eats away at the 
                              hard enamel shell around your tooth. Left unchecked, 
                              a hole will be created in the enamel and a cavity 
                              will rapidly form in the softer dentin which lies 
                              under the enamel. If the cavity is caught in time, 
                              usually a Filling will 
                              correct the problem. Larger cavities may require 
                              an Inlay or Onlay, or 
                              a Crown. However, if nothing 
                              is done and the decay spreads, the sensitive pulp 
                              (nerve) may become involved, often causing an Abscess, 
                              and Root Canal Therapy 
                              or Extraction may 
                              be required. |  
 
 
 
                     
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                      | No cavity on first X-ray. |  Months later, cavities that start 
                                between the teeth can't be seen by visual examination, 
                                but they can be detected on an X-ray. |  This cavity was detected and filled before the patient felt 
                    any discomfort, and before the nerve became infected or the 
                    tooth became abscessed.  There is another cavity shown in the X-ray on 
                    the right. Can you find it? It's difficult for the untrained 
                    eye to spot.  Click here to see where it is. (Hint: It's not the 
                    left edge of the top left tooth. That's just the edge of the 
                    frame around the X-ray).                   |