Abstract
The authors present a case concerning an adult male patient who developed multiple sites of root caries adjacent to the area where he habitually held a sugar‐free nicotine lozenge that contained mannitol and maltodextrin. The root caries occurred despite the patient’s excellent oral hygiene, exemplary dietary habits, and clinically normal salivary flow. Between 1999 and 2008, he had only required two restorations to repair carious lesions. This patient had a 20+‐year habit of using smokeless tobacco before switching to a cessation aid nicotine lozenge in May of 2008. A full‐mouth series of radiographs taken in November 2009 revealed carious lesions on virtually every posterior tooth. The nicotine lozenge’s principal ingredients were mannitol (75.7%) and maltodextrin. According to the United States’ current Food and Drug Administration (FDA) guidelines, manufacturers can advertise these lozenges as sugar‐free. Thus, it is assumed by the public that these types of products are incapable of “causing a cavity.” However, this case report presents evidence suggesting that frequent use of sugar‐free nicotine lozenges may be associated with dental caries.
Reference35 articles.
1. The 21CFR Online Database
2. Salivary Amylase: Digestion and Metabolic Syndrome
3. Staging and grading of periodontitis: Framework and proposal of a new classification and case definition
4. Interindividual variability in the metabolism and cardiovascular effects of nicotine in man;Benowitz N. L.;The Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics,1982