Oral Disease Study Guide for Dental Nurses

This guide is part of the Dental Nurse Study Guides collection.

A structured NEBDN-aligned guide covering common oral diseases, risk factors, clinical features, and the dental nurse’s role in early detection and prevention.

UK standards & professional relevance: This study guide aligns with the NEBDN syllabus and current UK dental practice standards, and supports both dental nurse students and qualified dental nurses for revision, refreshers, and patient education.

Oral disease icon showing an open mouth with inflamed gums, a magnifying glass highlighting oral infection, and a decayed tooth

Overview

Oral disease covers conditions affecting the teeth, gums, and oral tissues, with a strong NEBDN focus on recognition, risk factors, prevention, and the dental nurse’s role. This guide supports early detection, patient education, and appropriate escalation within professional scope.

What this guide covers

Key Oral Disease Topics (NEBDN-Mapped)

This section outlines how dental caries develops and the key factors that increase risk. It focuses on recognition and prevention rather than diagnosis or treatment.

Learn how periodontal diseases affect the supporting tissues of the teeth and how to distinguish reversible gingivitis from irreversible periodontitis at a recognition level.

This topic introduces non-carious tooth surface loss and the main mechanisms involved. Emphasis is placed on recognising patterns and identifying contributing factors.

An overview of common changes affecting the oral soft tissues, ranging from benign conditions to those requiring further investigation. Dental nurse responsibilities focus on observation and escalation.

This section highlights early warning signs of oral cancer and potentially malignant disorders. Early recognition and prompt escalation are central to the dental nurse’s role.

Understand how dental plaque forms, how it matures into biofilm, and how calculus develops. This underpins both caries and periodontal disease prevention.

This section explains where saliva comes from, what it does, and why it protects teeth and soft tissues. It links directly to dry mouth risk, caries risk, and patient support.

This section explains where saliva comes from, what it does, and why it protects teeth and soft tissues. It links directly to dry mouth risk, caries risk, and patient support.

Dental Caries

What it is

Dental caries is a biofilm-mediated disease caused by acids produced when oral bacteria metabolise fermentable carbohydrates. It results in progressive demineralisation of tooth enamel and dentine.

Causes & Risk Factors

Clinical Features (What the Dental Nurse May Observe)

Dental nurse roles & responsibilities

Prevention & Patient Advice

Risks & Common Pitfalls

Periodontal Diseases (Gingivitis & Periodontitis)

What it is

Periodontal disease is an inflammatory condition affecting the supporting tissues of the teeth. It ranges from gingivitis, which is reversible, to periodontitis, which involves irreversible attachment loss.

Causes & Risk Factors

Clinical Features (What the Dental Nurse May Observe)

Dental nurse roles & responsibilities

Prevention & Patient Advice

Risks & Common Pitfalls

Tooth Surface Loss (Erosion, Attrition & Abrasion)

What it is

Tooth surface loss refers to the non-carious loss of tooth tissue and occurs through erosion, attrition, or abrasion. It is increasingly common and often multifactorial.

Causes & Risk Factors

Clinical Features (What the Dental Nurse May Observe)

Dental nurse roles & responsibilities

Prevention & Patient Advice

Risks & Common Pitfalls

Oral Mucosal Conditions

What it is

Oral mucosal conditions affect the soft tissues of the mouth and range from common, self-limiting lesions to conditions requiring further investigation. Dental nurses play a key role in recognition and reporting, not diagnosis.

Causes & Risk Factors

Clinical Features (What the Dental Nurse May Observe)

Dental nurse roles & responsibilities

Prevention & Patient Advice

Risks & Common Pitfalls

Oral Cancer & Potentially Malignant Disorders

What it is

Oral cancer is a potentially life-threatening disease, and early detection significantly improves outcomes. Dental nurses have a vital role in recognising warning signs and ensuring prompt escalation.

Causes & Risk Factors

Clinical Features (What the Dental Nurse May Observe)

Dental nurse roles & responsibilities

Prevention & Patient Advice

Risks & Common Pitfalls

Plaque, Calculus & Biofilm

What it is

Dental plaque is a structured biofilm that forms naturally on tooth surfaces. If not removed, it can mineralise to form calculus and is the primary aetiological factor in both dental caries and periodontal disease.

Causes & Risk Factors

Clinical Features (What the Dental Nurse May Observe)

Dental nurse roles & responsibilities

Prevention & Patient Advice

Risks & Common Pitfalls

Risk Factors (Smoking, Diet, Dry Mouth & Systemic Disease)

What it is

Oral disease risk is influenced by a combination of lifestyle, medical, and environmental factors. Identifying high-risk patients is a key responsibility for the dental nurse.

Common Risk Factors

Clinical Features (What the Dental Nurse May Observe)

Dental nurse roles & responsibilities

Prevention & Patient Advice

Risks & Common Pitfalls

Prevention & Oral Health Promotion

What it is

Prevention is central to the dental nurse’s role and underpins all aspects of oral disease management in primary care.

Key Prevention Strategies

Dental nurse roles & responsibilities

Risks & Common Pitfalls

Test your understanding of oral disease recognition, risk factors, prevention, and the dental nurse’s role using exam-style multiple choice questions. These MCQs reflect NEBDN assessment style and focus on observation, prevention, professional responsibilities, and appropriate escalation — not diagnosis or treatment planning.

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This quiz is for self-assessment only and can be attempted multiple times.

Download the Oral Disease Study Guide (PDF)

A concise, printable summary for quick revision and offline study. Ideal for last-minute prep and regular refreshers in practice.

Last reviewed: December 2025