Abstract

In order to evaluate the risk of development of dental caries and/or of formation of dental calculus, salivary variables have often been used, but not with particular success. A reason for the apparent lack of association could be that the individual temporal variation of a characteristic was so substantial relative to the overall variation that it is not possible to characterize an individual by a single salivary measurement. The aim here was to examine the individual variation of pH, buffer capacity, and concentrations of calcium and phosphate and to compare it with the overall variation of the characteristics in order to shed light on the above problem. Eight weekly samples of up to 4 ml of unstimulated whole saliva were collected from 11 dental students before tooth brushing on their arrival at 8 a.m. in the dental school. Calcium was determined by atomic absorption spectroscopy, phosphate colorimetrically, and pH electrometrically. The buffer capacity was assessed by titration of the saliva sample from the pH initially observed to pH 3. It was found that within each individual the concentration of calcium and of phosphate, pH, the hydroxyapatite ion product and the buffer capacity varied considerably over the 7 weeks. The individual range frequently covered more than a third of the total range. Further, within each of the variables, single individuals could be found whose samples covered 60% or more of the overall range, whilst others covered less than 10% of the range. It was therefore concluded that, although collected at the same time of the day, pH, buffer capacity and concentrations of calcium and phosphate in unstimulated whole saliva in the single individual vary so much that characterization of individuals and of their saliva based on a single salivary analysis is unreliable and hazardous.

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