S
Sabiha A. Al-Mutawa
Publications - 27
Citations - 827
Sabiha A. Al-Mutawa is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Metabolic syndrome & Population. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 27 publications receiving 735 citations.
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Journal Article
Dental caries experience of disabled children and young adults in Kuwait.
TL;DR: The study confirmed the need for strengthening organised preventive and restorative care for this population of disabled children and young adults in Kuwait.
Journal ArticleDOI
Metabolic Disease Risk in Children by Salivary Biomarker Analysis
J. Max Goodson,Alpdogan Kantarci,Mor-Li Hartman,Gerald V. Denis,Danielle Stephens,Hatice Hasturk,Tina Yaskell,Jorel Vargas,Xiaoshan Wang,MaryAnn Cugini,Roula Barake,Osama Alsmadi,Sabiha A. Al-Mutawa,Jitendra Ariga,Pramod Soparkar,Jawad Behbehani,Kazem Behbehani,Francine K. Welty +17 more
TL;DR: Significantly altered levels of salivary biomarkers in obese children from a high-risk population, suggest the potential for developing non-invasive screening procedures to identify T2D-vulnerable individuals and a means to test preventative strategies.
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Field Trial on Caries Prevention with Xylitol Candies among Disabled School Students
TL;DR: Xylitol seemed to have a strong preventive and a clear remineralizing effect on caries among physically disabled school students in Kuwait.
Journal ArticleDOI
The salivary microbiome is altered in the presence of a high salivary glucose concentration.
J. Max Goodson,Mor-Li Hartman,Ping Shi,Hatice Hasturk,Tina Yaskell,Jorel Vargas,Xiaoqing Song,MaryAnn Cugini,Roula Barake,Osama Alsmadi,Sabiha A. Al-Mutawa,Jitendra Ariga,Pramod Soparkar,Jawad Behbehani,Kazem Behbehani +14 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that HSG in adolescents may be predicted from salivary microbial diversity or frequency, and that the changes in the oral microbial composition seen in adolescents with developing metabolic disease may the consequence of hyperglycemia.
Journal ArticleDOI
Impact of dental health on children's oral health-related quality of life: a cross-sectional study.
Aishah Alsumait,Mohamed ElSalhy,Kim D. Raine,Ken Cor,Rebecca Gokiert,Sabiha A. Al-Mutawa,Maryam Amin +6 more
TL;DR: The increase in the number of carious teeth was associated with a limitation in oral functions and preventive treatment had a positive impact on children's emotional well-being and restorative treatments improved their oral function.