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Valeria V. Gordan

Researcher at University of Florida

Publications -  177
Citations -  5842

Valeria V. Gordan is an academic researcher from University of Florida. The author has contributed to research in topics: Private practice & Amalgam (dentistry). The author has an hindex of 40, co-authored 171 publications receiving 5189 citations. Previous affiliations of Valeria V. Gordan include University of Florida Health Science Center.

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Minimal intervention dentistry for managing dental caries - a review: report of a FDI task group.

TL;DR: The history of minimal intervention dentistry (MID) for managing dental caries is described and evidence for various carious lesion detection devices, for preventive measures, for restorative and non-restorative therapies as well as for repairing rather than replacing defective restorations are presented.
Journal Article

Failure, repair, refurbishing and longevity of restorations.

TL;DR: The clinical diagnosis of secondary caries is the main reason for replacement of all types of directly-placed restorations and the criteria for the diagnosis must be improved and come in line with those for primary caries.
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The effect of surface finishing and storage solutions on the color stability of resin-based composites

TL;DR: Finishing treatments and storage solutions significantly affect the surface staining of RBC materials and patients should remove the polyester film-finished surface and advise patients that drinking wine could intensify surfaceStaining on RBC restorations.
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Correlations of oral bacterial arginine and urea catabolism with caries experience.

TL;DR: The potential for alkali generation by oral bacteria as a means to prevent dental caries is supported by an extensive amount of evidence from in vitro studies, as well as by some indirect clinical observations.
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Effect of an acidic primer on shear bond strength of orthodontic brackets

TL;DR: In vitro findings indicated that the use of acidic primers to bond orthodontic brackets to the enamel surface could provide clinically acceptable shear bond forces, and there was a tendency to have less residual adhesive remaining on the tooth when an acid primer was used.