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What is Friction

Handbook of Research on Clinical Applications of Computerized Occlusal Analysis in Dental Medicine
Micro-deformation of the surface atoms as they absorb the kinetic energy of movement across the surfaces.
Published in Chapter:
The Occlusal, Neurological, and Orthopedic Origins and Implications of the Hypersensitive Dentition
Nick Yiannios, DDS (Private Practice, USA & Center for Neural Occlusion, USA)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-5225-9254-9.ch010
Abstract
In the dental literature, the association between the occlusion and hypersensitive teeth is poorly explained. Quantified occlusal contact force and timing parameters have been largely ignored in studies assessing hypersensitive teeth. This chapter introduces a novel occlusal concept, frictional dental hypersensitivity (FDH), after systemically simplifying the existing and often confusing terminology used in the literature to describe the variant clinical presentations of the hypersensitive dentition. Clinical evidence from combining computerized occlusal analysis and electromyography is presented linking opposing posterior tooth friction and muscular hyperactivity to FDH. This chapter will outline how occlusion, many muscular TMD symptoms, and FDH are all interrelated. Both a pilot study and a 100 subject cold ice water swish follow-up study are presented and used a numerical visual analog scale (NS/VAS) to quantify cold response dental hypersensitivity resolution observed in occlusally symptomatic patients that underwent the immediate complete anterior guidance development coronoplasty (ICAGD). This computer-guided occlusal adjustment procedure eliminated pretreatment FDH symptomatology, further supporting that dental hypersensitivity often has an occlusally-based, frictional etiology. Additionally, consideration for the orthopedic influences that may directly affect the occlusion and neurology of the system are outlined, as well as the medical concept of tooth allodynia. Furthermore, trigeminal neurological influences are compared and contrasted to autonomic sympathetic inputs in relation to the influence that they each have upon the hypersensitive dentition. Lastly, the greater auricular diagnostic nerve block is discussed, as is the influence that this nerve may have upon the hypersensitive mandibular posterior dentition.
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Detecting and Quantifying Cervical Dentin Hypersensitivity Using Air Indexing Combined with the T-Scan System
Friction results from mechanical surface interaction during motion, when the substrate surfaces are under solid, liquid, and/or gaseous applied force.
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Understanding Fluency and Friction in Customer Experience Management
Points of resistance that make the customer journey less seamless, continuous, and natural from customer’s point of view.
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Normalizing an Off-Campus Course with Video-Conferencing
Friction is the sum of the ongoing costs that make the continued use of a technology challenging or impractical. Friction components include the time and effort required to generate new lessons, prepare resources and consumables, and maintain the workspace (e.g., computer lab, blog, etc.). A low Friction technology requires little money or time to maintain or reuse.
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Bioinspired Solutions for MEMS Tribology
It is the resistance to motion. It is the resistance that one surface encounters when moving over another. Friction causes loss in energy.
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Combining the Air Indexing Method With the T-Scan System to Detect and Quantify Cervical Dentin Hypersensitivity
Friction results from mechanical surface interaction during motion, when the substrate surfaces are under solid, liquid, and/or gaseous applied force.
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Investigation on the Wear Resistance of Ni-B-TiO2 Composite Coatings for Dry Crushing Application
A force resists to the motion (sliding or rolling) of two surface of solids in contact.
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The Role of Two-Dimensional Materials in Superlubricity on Friction and Wear-Prone Surfaces
A force that prevents solid surfaces, fluid layers, and material elements from sliding against each other from moving in the same direction.
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