Call for Abstract

5th Annual Conference on Oral Care and Dentistry, will be organized around the theme “Upgrading innovative ideas in the field of Dental Science and Oral Care”

DENTAL ORAL CARE 2022 is comprised of 20 tracks and 0 sessions designed to offer comprehensive sessions that address current issues in DENTAL ORAL CARE 2022.

Submit your abstract to any of the mentioned tracks. All related abstracts are accepted.

Register now for the conference by choosing an appropriate package suitable to you.

Track 11: Dental Stem Cells

Foundational microorganisms are indistinguishable cells that are capable of self-repair and can provide a variety of cell types to replace lost tissues and heal various illnesses. Prophylaxis or the cleansing of the teeth is a preventive factor in dental care that expels math aggregations. Undifferentiated cells with restorative eagerness for dentistry have been identified as a therapeutic target for oral facial tissues. Dental Tissue Engineering, Dental Pulp Stem Cells, Periodontal Ligament Stem Cells, Dental Follicle Stem Cells.

  • DPSCs
  • SHED
  • Stem cells from apical papilla (SCAP)
  • Periodontal ligament stem cells (PDLSCs)

Track 20: Dental Anesthesia

Dental anaesthesia is a pre-surgery type of sedation used in dental surgery. It is arbitrary because it relieves pain or causes anxiety in all areas of the mouth during surgery. Depending on the procedure several forms of anaesthetic are used. It is a technique in dentistry that uses local anaesthetic, sedation and general anaesthesia to control pain and anxiety. In both healthy and medically challenged patients, dental anesthesiology has focused on the clinical effectiveness and safety of anaesthetics. Pain and palliative care will be regarded as a medical super specialty.

  • Mandibular anaesthesia
  • Oral Appliance therapy
  • Prevention of risk factors

Track 19: Forensic Dentistry

Forensic dentistry is the use of dental expertise in the proper management, inspection and analysis of dental evidence, which may then be bestowed in the interests of justice. Forensic dentists aid analytical organisations in identifying reborn human remains in the extraction process as well as the identification of fragmented bodies. Dental data, including radiographs, ante-mortem and post-mortem pictures, and DNA, are used in the analysis. The term "forensic odontology" comes from the Latin term "jurisdictional odontology," which means "jurisdictional odontology."

  • Identification & Methods
  • Dental identification
  • Estimating age
  • Personal abuse – Oral and Dental aspect

Track 18: Prosthodontics

The speciality of prosthodontics is concerned with dental prosthesis. These are used for complete mouth restoration and tooth replacement, as well as reconstructing intraoral defects like as missing teeth, missing teeth components and missing soft or hard elements of the jaw and palate. Prosthodontics provides multidisciplinary levels of care as well as the most advanced type of succession, restorative therapy and maintenance. Dentures, crowns, bridges and complete or partial dentures are among of the treatments that are aimed to strike a balance between practicality, lifespan and beauty.

  • Implant-based prostheses
  • Maxilla-facial prosthetics
  • Dental Implants
  • Management of temporo-mandibular disorders

Track 17: Endodontics

Endodontics is a branch of dentistry that focuses on the diagnosis and treatment of dental pulp diseases as well as related per radicular disorders. Endodontic therapy, endodontic retreatment, surgery, healing broken teeth, and treating dental trauma are some of the techniques included. Teeth are made up of a solid framework that houses nerves, blood vessels, and soft, living tissue known as the pulp. An endodontist's most popular approach for removing infected pulp and nerves from a tooth's root canal is root canal therapy.

  • Dental care for aged
  • Regenerative endodontic
  • Endodontic therapies
  • Nerve fibers
  • DNA analysis

Track  16: Orthodontics and Dental Implants

Orthodontics is a branch of dentistry that deals with the inspection, correction and repositioning of malpositioned teeth and jaws. It operates in a highly specialised area of the industry. It employs a variety of medical dental devices, such as temporary anchorage devices, braces, headgear, plates, implants, cleft lip and palate, accelerated estrogenic orthodontics and dentofacial orthodontics, among others as well as the most recent advances in orthodontics, such as accelerated estrogenic orthodontics and dentofacial orthodontics. A dental implant is a titanium post that resembles a tooth root and offers a sturdy foundation for the replacement of teeth that are designed to look and function like your natural teeth. It is a mandible or maxilla implant that contains an artificial tooth root. An embedded system or device is a term used to describe a dental implant. Screw loosening, screw fracture, cement failure and unfavourable soft tissue responses are some of the issues linked with dental implants. It also enhances dental health since it eliminates the need for bridges to be fastened to other teeth.

  • Functional appliances
  • Malocclusions                                                                                                                              
  • Aesthetic dentistry
  • Gingivitis
  • Sub periosteal implants
  • Dental caries

Track 15: Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery

Modern medical procedure has progressed to the point that the amount of knowledge and specialised abilities required has encouraged doctors to specialise in certain areas, usually an anatomical zone of the body or on occasion, a specific technique or type of patient. Oral and maxillofacial surgeons specialise on disorders involving the face, mouth and jaws' hard and soft tissues (the upper jaw is referred to as the maxilla). The specialty's scope is broad, and it covers the diagnosis and treatment of facial injuries, head and neck malignancies, salivary gland disorders, facial disproportion, facial discomfort, impacted teeth, cysts and tumours of the jaws and a variety of oral mucosa issues such as mouth ulcers and infections.

  • Speech pathology
  • salivary gland pathology
  • Periodontal diseases
  • Soft-tissue pathology

Track 14: Dental Nursing and Ethics

A Dental Nurse assists the dentist in all aspects of the patient's dental care. A dental attendant might assist any member of the dental team, including clinical and dental professionals/technologists, hygienists and advisers in treating patients. Some people are looking for a registration, while others will be treated in a confusing manner. A dental medical attendant will welcome patients and provide direct assistance with the treatment itself at a dental practise: Taking care of instrument sterilisation maintaining dental rehearsing equipment ensuring that all necessary materials and supplies are in place, maintaining patient records including notes when the dental specialist is checking a patient, working closely with the dental specialist responding quickly to inquiries and generally keeping the medical procedure ready for use.

  • Microbes
  • Sterilisation
  • Disinfection
  • COSHH

Track 13: Periodontics, Gingivitis, Endodontic

A periodontist is a dentist that specialises in the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of periodontal disease, as well as the placement of dental implants. Periodontitis is also beneficial in the treatment of oral problems. In these zones, periodontitis develops rapidly with three additional lengthy periods of preparation beyond dental school. Periodontitis is a term used to describe the treatment of increasingly risky periodontal situations, such as those with a genuine gum disease or a confusing restorative history. Scaling and root planning (cleaning the debased surface of the root) or root surface debridement are some of the medications available for periodontitis.

  • Gum disease
  • Peri-implantitis
  • Periodontitis
  • Resorption

Track 12: Dental Instruments

Dental instruments are the tools that dentists use to treat patients. They include instruments for analysing, controlling, treating, re-establishing and removing teeth and other oral structures. The dental professional or dental assistant uses dental mirrors to observe a flawless picture of the teeth in places of the mouth where deception is problematic or unintelligible. They're also used to reflect light onto desired surfaces provide roundabout vision, and increase access or vision by removing sensitive tissues. Dental instruments are the tools that dentists use to treat patients.

  • Periodontal Probe
  • Ultrasonic Scaler
  • Extracting Forceps
  • Dental Elevator
  • Air Water Syringe

Track 1: Pediatric Dentistry

The American Dental Association considers paediatric dentistry to be one of the top ten dental claims to fame. Endodontics, oral maxillofacial pathology, maxillofacial radiology, oral maxillofacial medical procedure, orthodontics dent facial, orthopaedics, periodontics and prosthodontics are among the other specialties. A professional degree in biological science, welfare science, or sociology would be the first step. While still in school, one can learn more about the profession by shadowing at a paediatric dentistry practise or a children's emergency clinic, or by participating in scholarly research that examines children's oral health.

  • Pediatric bruxism
  • Advanced research
  • Diagnosis/imaging & use of lasers in children
  • Preventive home care programs

Track 10: Oral Microbiology

Oral microbiology research, like other natural sciences has experienced periods of "reductionism" and "far-reaching quality." Microbiologists have long used a reductionist approach to study complex microbial systems by isolating individual bacterial species. The soil in the human mouth is conducive to the growth of certain oral-microorganisms detected there. It provides a plentiful supply of water and enhancements, as well as a comfortable temperature. While reductionism has pushed oral microbiology forward, it has been discovered that a social affair of smaller bits cannot describe the whole! Microbiologists of today are studying "system thinking" and "thorough quality." From the "overall quality rule" to "met genomics" and "biofilms," microbiology is entering an exciting new age focused on uncovering and untangling the connections between various aspects of a microbial system.

  • Biofilm
  • Quorum Sensing
  • Microbiome
  • Sensitivity Analysis
  • Bacterium

Track 9: Oral Cancer

The sickness of the covering of the lips, mouth, or upper neck is known as oral malignant growth, or mouth disease. It usually starts as a simple white fix in the mouth then thickens generates red fixes, an ulcer and continues to develop. When it's on the lips, it usually looks like a stubborn crusting ulcer that doesn't heal and develops over time. Other adverse effects may include painful or agonising gulping, new knots or knocks in the neck, mouth swelling, or a feeling of death in the mouth or lips. The signs and symptoms of oral infection development vary depending on the location of the tumour, but they are often small scattered white spots in the mouth. Oral cancer may appear as a mixture of red and white spots (blended red and white patches are significantly more prone to be carcinogenic when biopsied). A persistent painful fix with ulceration and a barely excruciating elevated fringe is the main warning indicator. On the lip, the ulcer is more commonly crusty and dry and in the throat, it is more frequently a mass. It's also linked to a white fix loose teeth, weeping gums, constant ear pain and a feeling of death in the lip and jawline or swelling.

  • Bleeding Gums
  • Braces & Oral Hygiene
  • Deciduous Teeth
  • Dental Anxiety

Track 8: Oral Problems

The majority of the oral ailment problem is caused by seven diseases and illnesses. They include dental caries (tooth decay), periodontal (gum) illnesses, oral diseases, and HIV oral symptoms. Noma, Oro-dental injury, congenital fissure and perception of taste Almost all diseases and ailments are either avoidable or treatable in their early stages. When a microbial biofilm (plaque) forms on the tooth surface, it converts the free sugars found in foods and beverages into acids, which damage down the tooth finish and dentine over time. Tooth structures are demolished as a result of continued high admission of free sugars, insufficient exposure to fluoride, and the absence of customary microbial biofilm removal, resulting in an increase in cavities and pain impacts on oral-wellness related personal satisfaction, and in the advanced stage of tooth misfortune and fundamental contamination.

  • Cavities
  • Abscessed Tooth
  • Apicoectomy
  • Deciduous Teeth

Track 7: Orthodontics & Prosthodontics

Orthodontics is a dental speciality that focuses on the inspection, correction and modification of malpositioned teeth and jaws. Dentofacial orthopaedics is a branch of dentistry that focuses on changing facial development. The unusual course of movement of the teeth and jaws is widespread; about 30% of adults have malocclusions severe enough to benefit from orthodontic treatment. Orthodontia, also known as Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopaedics is one of the ten dental specialties recognised by the American Dental Association. It deals with the replacement of missing teeth and the correction of their distinguishing characteristics, evasion and modification.

  • Arch Wire
  • Brackets
  • Crossbite
  • Elastics (Rubber Bands)
  • Headgear

Track 6: Oral and Dental Health

Dental and oral health are critical components of overall health and success. Dental cavities and gum disease are caused by poor oral hygiene, which has also been linked to cardiovascular illness, disease and diabetes. You should not wait until you experience symptoms to see your dentist. Going to the dentist twice a year will, for the most part, allow them to diagnose a problem before you ever notice any symptoms. If you observe any of the following warning signs of oral medical concerns, you should schedule an appointment as soon as possible.

Track 5: Molecular Biology and Dentistry

Oral health research is currently in the era of "proof-based dentistry," as evidenced by a growing societal belief throughout the world that clinical practise should be based on rational data. Clinical research, atomic dentistry, the human genome project, transcriptases and proteomes have all recently opened enormous doors for the interpretation of basic science disclosures to dental medicinal services at the chair side and bedside through the middle person method. The responsiveness of dental treatment is influenced by a variety of factors and techniques. Understanding the interactions between heredity, atomic science, organic chemistry and ecological variables (counting therapy) that influence our patient's treatment reaction will be essential to the practise of personalised dentistry. This course reading is intended to serve as a starting point for academics, physicians, scientists and dental students who are interested in Oral Molecular Science.

Track 4: Dental Implants

A dental implant (also known as an embed or equipment) is a delicate component that connects with the jaw or skull bone to support a dental prosthesis such as a crown connect dental replacement, facial prosthesis, or as a stay. The goal of today's dental embed is to use a biologic technique known as Osseo integration, in which elements like as titanium create a personal relationship to bone. The embed is initially configured as Osseo integrate and then included. Before either the dental prosthetic (a tooth, augmentation, or dental replacement) is annexed to install or to put which will retain a dental prosthetic, a variable proportion of mending time is necessary for Osseo integration.

  • Have one or a lot of missing teeth
  • Have a jawbone that is reached full growth
  • Have healthy oral tissues
  • Are unable or unwilling to wear dentures
  • Want to enhance your speech

Track 3: Oral Pathology & Microbiology

The natural environment of the human mouth is conducive to the growth of certain bacteria. It provides a plentiful supply of water and enhancements, as well as a comfortable temperature. Mouth bacteria cling to the teeth and gums to prevent mechanical flushing from the mouth to the stomach, where hydrochloric acid obliterates harmful fragile living life. Nonetheless, a very effective natural host defence mechanism constantly monitors bacterial colonisation and prevents bacterial disruption of nearby tissues. The activity of oral bacteria in the two major dental illnesses, dental caries and periodontal contamination has a remarkable concordance between dental plaque organisms and the typical host defence system.

  • Dental caries
  • Dental plaque
  • Oral bacteria
  • Oral medicine
  • Osteoporosis and tooth decay

Track 2: Geriatric Dentistry

Geriatric dentistry is the conveyance of dental consideration to more seasoned grown-ups including determination, aversion the board and treatment of issues related with age related diseases. The mouth is alluded to as a reflection of by and large wellbeing, fortifying that oral wellbeing is a necessary piece of general wellbeing. Poor dental health has been identified as a risk factor for general medical problems in the elderly population. Because of an increase in chronic circumstances and physical/mental incapacities, more mature adults are becoming increasingly vulnerable to oral illnesses or maladies. As a result, the historic structure is a unique gathering in terms of care arrangements. The whole population is currently maturing, with the quantity and spread of elderly people increasing dramatically.