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Journal ArticleDOI

Impact of oral hygiene and use of fluorides on caries increment in children during one year

TLDR
In 8- and 13-yr-olds it was possible to show that children with a low caries increment had lower mean values for frequency of meals, daily sucrose consumption and prevalence of lactobacilli and S. mutans in the saliva thanChildren with a high caries Increment had higher meanvalues for toothbrushing frequency, use of fluoridated toothpaste and NaF-mouthrinse.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to assess the modifying effect of oral hygiene, and the use of fluorides on caries increment in children when frequency of meals, intake of sugars and prevalence of lactobacilli and S. mutans in the saliva were known. In 8- and 13-yr-olds it was possible to show that children with a low caries increment (0-2 surfaces) had lower mean values for frequency of meals, daily sucrose consumption and prevalence of lactobacilli and S. mutans in the saliva than children with a high caries increment (greater than or equal to 3 surfaces). There were higher mean values in the low caries-increment groups for toothbrushing frequency, use of fluoridated toothpaste and NaF-mouthrinse. Gingival bleeding index (GBI %) was used as an objective measure of oral hygiene and revealed statistically significant differences between the two groups in both age groups (P less than 0.05, P less than 0.01) with the highest scores recorded in the high caries-increment groups. Using as discriminating variables number of meals/day, daily consumption of sucrose and other sugars and number of lactobacilli and S. mutans in the saliva, 77% of the 8-yr-olds and 70% of the 13-yr-olds were correctly classified with regard to net caries increment. If GBJ %, tooth-brushing frequency, use of fluoridated toothpaste and NaF-mouthrinse were included in the analysis another 4% of the 8-yr-olds and 11% of the 13-yr-olds could be correctly classified.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Diet, nutrition and the prevention of dental diseases

TL;DR: There is convincing evidence, collectively from human intervention studies, epidemiological studies, animal studies and experimental studies, for an association between the amount and frequency of free sugars intake and dental caries.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect on Caries of Restricting Sugars Intake Systematic Review to Inform WHO Guidelines

TL;DR: There is evidence of moderate quality showing that caries is lower when free-sugars intake is < 10% E, and with the < 5% E cut-off, a significant relationship was observed, but the evidence was judged to be of very low quality.
Journal ArticleDOI

Oral Microbial Ecology and the Role of Salivary Immunoglobulin A

TL;DR: The oral ecosystems, the principal factors that may control the oral microbiota, a basic knowledge of the secretory immune system, the biological functions ofSIgA, and, finally, experiments related to the role of SIgA in oral microbial ecology are described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sugar consumption and caries risk: a systematic review.

TL;DR: It was concluded that the relationship between sugar consumption and caries is much weaker in the modern age of fluoride exposure than it used to be and controlling the consumption of sugar remains a justifiable part of caries prevention, however, if not always the most important aspect.
Journal ArticleDOI

Longevity of posterior dental restorations and reasons for failure

TL;DR: Multilevel Cox-regression analyses identified young age of the patient, high previous caries experience, deep cavities, and saucer-shaped preparation technique as predisposing to shorter longevity of resin-composite restorations.
References
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Journal Article

Problems and proposals for recording gingivitis and plaque.

Ainamo J, +1 more
TL;DR: The origin of indices for recording gingivitis and plaque is reviewed and the use of the site prevalence of a single finding is suggested, which could be used as a clinically relevant parameter for oral hygiene and gingival inflammation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of caries preventive measures in children highly infected with the bacterium streptococcus mutans

TL;DR: A reduction in caries activity can be achieved by controlled antimicrobial treatment of 13-14-year-old children treated with chlorhexidine gel when the number of Strep.
Journal ArticleDOI

Relationship between dietary habits and caries increment assessed over two years in 405 English adolescent school children

TL;DR: Multivariate analyses revealed that this relationship could not be explained by differences in sex, social class, tooth-brushing habits or level of plaque as measured by gingival inflammation, and weight of sugar intake appeared to be more strongly correlated to caries than frequency of intake.
Journal ArticleDOI

Use of the Germfree Animal Technic in the Study of Experimental Dental Caries: I. Basic Observations on Rats Reared Free of All Microorganisms

TL;DR: The objective demonstration of such phenomena is made exceedingly difficult, if not impossible, by the ubiquitous nature of oral microorganisms, some of which have the capacity, in vitro, to bring about a dissolution of tooth substance closely resembling in some respects certain stages in the dental caries process.
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