CAVEities: Comparing the Effects of Carbonic Acid found in Caves and Soft Drinks

A significant factor in the incidence of tooth decay in the United States is the consumption of sugar-containing soft drinks. Another component of the decay process is thought to be the carbonic acid contained in these drinks. This study compares the effects of carbonic acid on various structures in...

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Main Authors: Reed, Ashley, Thomas, Kandess
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Murray State's Digital Commons 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.murraystate.edu/postersatthecapitol/2007/WKU/5
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spelling ftmurraystateu:oai:digitalcommons.murraystate.edu:postersatthecapitol-2018 2023-05-15T15:52:15+02:00 CAVEities: Comparing the Effects of Carbonic Acid found in Caves and Soft Drinks Reed, Ashley Thomas, Kandess 2018-02-19T21:46:03Z https://digitalcommons.murraystate.edu/postersatthecapitol/2007/WKU/5 unknown Murray State's Digital Commons https://digitalcommons.murraystate.edu/postersatthecapitol/2007/WKU/5 Posters-at-the-Capitol text 2018 ftmurraystateu 2022-03-18T06:47:03Z A significant factor in the incidence of tooth decay in the United States is the consumption of sugar-containing soft drinks. Another component of the decay process is thought to be the carbonic acid contained in these drinks. This study compares the effects of carbonic acid on various structures including caves and teeth. Caves are formed as a result of continual exposure to acids. A person who consumes soft drinks throughout the day is exposing their teeth to the same substances. Dramatic before and after photos will exemplify the deleterious effects of these substances on an individual’s teeth. Additionally, data will be provided that illustrate the progression of dental decay among children and young adults in the United States. Text Carbonic acid Murray State University: Digital Commons
institution Open Polar
collection Murray State University: Digital Commons
op_collection_id ftmurraystateu
language unknown
description A significant factor in the incidence of tooth decay in the United States is the consumption of sugar-containing soft drinks. Another component of the decay process is thought to be the carbonic acid contained in these drinks. This study compares the effects of carbonic acid on various structures including caves and teeth. Caves are formed as a result of continual exposure to acids. A person who consumes soft drinks throughout the day is exposing their teeth to the same substances. Dramatic before and after photos will exemplify the deleterious effects of these substances on an individual’s teeth. Additionally, data will be provided that illustrate the progression of dental decay among children and young adults in the United States.
format Text
author Reed, Ashley
Thomas, Kandess
spellingShingle Reed, Ashley
Thomas, Kandess
CAVEities: Comparing the Effects of Carbonic Acid found in Caves and Soft Drinks
author_facet Reed, Ashley
Thomas, Kandess
author_sort Reed, Ashley
title CAVEities: Comparing the Effects of Carbonic Acid found in Caves and Soft Drinks
title_short CAVEities: Comparing the Effects of Carbonic Acid found in Caves and Soft Drinks
title_full CAVEities: Comparing the Effects of Carbonic Acid found in Caves and Soft Drinks
title_fullStr CAVEities: Comparing the Effects of Carbonic Acid found in Caves and Soft Drinks
title_full_unstemmed CAVEities: Comparing the Effects of Carbonic Acid found in Caves and Soft Drinks
title_sort caveities: comparing the effects of carbonic acid found in caves and soft drinks
publisher Murray State's Digital Commons
publishDate 2018
url https://digitalcommons.murraystate.edu/postersatthecapitol/2007/WKU/5
genre Carbonic acid
genre_facet Carbonic acid
op_source Posters-at-the-Capitol
op_relation https://digitalcommons.murraystate.edu/postersatthecapitol/2007/WKU/5
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