D
Diana Wolff
Researcher at University Hospital Heidelberg
Publications - 56
Citations - 1217
Diana Wolff is an academic researcher from University Hospital Heidelberg. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 48 publications receiving 1015 citations. Previous affiliations of Diana Wolff include Heidelberg University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Mineral trioxide aggregate or calcium hydroxide direct pulp capping: an analysis of the clinical treatment outcome.
Johannes Mente,Beate Geletneky,Marc Ohle,Martin Jean Koch,Paul Ding,Diana Wolff,Jens Dreyhaupt,Nicolas Martin,Hans Joerg Staehle,Thorsten Pfefferle +9 more
TL;DR: MTA appears to be more effective than calcium hydroxide for maintaining long-term pulp vitality after direct pulp capping, and should always be aimed for.
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Recontouring teeth and closing diastemas with direct composite buildups: A clinical evaluation of survival and quality parameters
Diana Wolff,Theresa Kraus,Cornelia Schach,Maria Pritsch,Johannes Mente,Hans Joerg Staehle,Paul Ding +6 more
TL;DR: Direct composite buildups are aesthetic, functional, and biologically sound treatment options for recontouring teeth and closing diastemas with clinically promising survival rates and tooth shape correction can be recommended in cases in which minimally invasive or non-invasive procedures on healthy teeth are indicated.
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Oral status in patients with early rheumatoid arthritis: a prospective, case–control study
Björn Wolff,Timo Berger,Cornelia Frese,Regina Max,Norbert Blank,Hanns-Martin Lorenz,Diana Wolff +6 more
TL;DR: Increased loss of periodontal attachment and alveolar bone can be detected in patients with ERA, therefore it is proposed that the consulting rheumatologists inform the patients that they have a higher risk ofperiodontal disease.
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Recontouring teeth and closing diastemas with direct composite buildups: A 5-year follow-up
TL;DR: The direct composite buildups observed in this study were found to have promising clinical outcome and good quality parameters after 5 years, and provide an acceptable treatment alternative for the aesthetic correction and reshaping of anterior teeth.
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Effect of endurance training on dental erosion, caries, and saliva.
TL;DR: Higher risk for dental erosions, exercise‐dependent caries risk, and load‐dependent changes in saliva parameters point out the need for risk‐adapted preventive dental concepts in the field of sports dentistry.