> I think what you are referring to is the interproximal areas between teeth
> the lighter outer area is the enamel (lighter because it is more dense) and
> the darker inside is the dentin (less dense) and the dark middle (nerve and
> blood vessels (even less dense) decay appears as darker spots in the enamel
> and dentin reminerilization can only occur in enamel, once it reaches the
> dentin all bets are off get out the drill!
>
> I think this is what you were talking about.
>
> Your friendly neighborhood paleo dentist :)
>
> Alex
I'm still confused. There is enamel in the bones _between_ the teeth? My
x-rays showed very light areas defining the _bone_ not teeth above the gum
line _between_ the teeth (but in between the roots), which correlated with a
tightening of the teeth themselves. Interproximinal sounds more right than
the term I used. But that's _enamel_?
The teeth themselves didn't show remineralization (that I know of) but only
the bone mass of (I assume) the jaw itself.
Cheers,
Kirt (your friendly neighborhood dental patient--who prefers ultrasonex to
sonicare by a 400% margin ;))