Mesial, Distal, Lingual (or Palatal), Buccal (or Facial), and Occlusal (or Incisal)
A typical tooth has five surfaces: occlusal (top biting surface), lingual (tongue side), buccal (cheek side), mesial (toward the midline), and distal (away from the midline).
It's possible to have two different cavities in one tooth. It's also possible that it is just one cavity, but it is on two surfaces of the tooth. Each tooth has five surfaces. Each surface added to a filling will be more money.
This is two of the surfaces of a tooth
Its basically a large filling. A three surface filling can be described in example as "MOD Filling" which would the the mesial, occlusal, facial surfaces, if indeeed, that is the 3 surfaces the filling is going. Mesial and distal represent the different sides of the tooth, and occlusal is the top - center surface of the tooth. So MOD would be a filling ranging across the top of the tooth. The entire top wont be gone, but there will be a noticable filling.
Plaque.
Yes, it has five surfaces.
24 hours
Blank Surfaces - 2000 So This Goes in Tooth Paste 7-12 was released on: USA: 6 December 2006
these are the surfaces on a tooth, which are in contact with the adjacent teeth. there are 2 proximal surfaces, namely mesial and distal. the former is towards the midline and the latter is away from the midline.
Blank Surfaces - 2000 Is Ths Room Filling with Tooth Paste 5-9 was released on: USA: 1 September 2004
Five
molar