abfraction
loss of tooth structure not caused by tooth decay
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abfraction
Summary
abfraction is a dental disease[1]. abfraction draws 68 Wikipedia views per month (dental_disease category, ranking #1 of 4).[2]
Key Facts
- abfraction's image is recorded as Dental abrasion klinovidny de207.jpg[3].
- abfraction's instance of is recorded as dental disease[4].
- abfraction's subclass of is recorded as teeth hard tissue disease[5].
- abfraction's Commons category is recorded as Abfraction[6].
- abfraction's different from is recorded as dental abrasion[7].
- abfraction's different from is recorded as dental erosion[8].
- abfraction's health specialty is recorded as dentistry[9].
- abfraction's UMLS CUI is recorded as C1290755[10].
- abfraction's WordLift URL is recorded as http://data.wordlift.io/wl01714/entity/abfraction.html[11].
- abfraction's Microsoft Academic ID is recorded as 2779323778[12].
- abfraction's ICD-11 ID is recorded as DA08.13[13].
- abfraction's ICD-11 ID is recorded as 805506345[14].
- abfraction's WikiProjectMed ID is recorded as Abfraction[15].
- abfraction's A Dictionary of Dentistry entry ID is recorded as 10[16].
Why It Matters
abfraction draws 68 Wikipedia views per month (dental_disease category, ranking #1 of 4).[2] abfraction has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[17]