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Journal ArticleDOI

Pattern and severity of early childhood caries.

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TLDR
Infant bottle-feeding habits and ethnicity other than Caucasian were significant determinants for both anterior caries pattern and severity of ECC in 4-5-year-old Australian children.
Abstract
– Objectives:  The aim of this study was to investigate the association between selected social and behavioural variables and the pattern and severity of early childhood caries (ECC) within a community child population. Methods:  A cross-sectional sample of 2515 children aged 4–5 years were examined in a preschool setting using decayed, missing, filled teeth/surface (dmft/dmfs) indices and a self-administered questionnaire was used to obtain information regarding social, demographic, birth, infant feeding, oral and general health attitudes. Children with caries (847) were divided into anterior or posterior caries pattern groups and severe (dmfs score ≥6) or non-severe (dmfs score <6) caries groups. The data were analysed using a chi-square test and modelled using a logistic regression procedure. Results:  Significant variables associated with anterior ECC pattern were ethnicity other than Caucasian (OR = 2.1, 95% CI = 1.4–3.1), sipping from the bottle during the day (OR = 1.9, 95% CI = 1.3–2.7), male gender (OR = 1.6, 95% CI = 1.2–2.2) and sleeping with a bottle at night (OR = 1.5, 95% CI = 1.1–2.2). Significant variables associated with severe ECC form were sipping from the bottle during the day (OR = 2, 95% CI = 1.4–2.8), maternal age at birth ≤24 years (OR = 1.8, 95% CI = 1.3–2.7), ethnicity other than Caucasian (OR = 1.6, 95% CI = 1.1–2.5) and sleeping with a bottle at night (OR = 1.5, 95% CI = 1.1–2.2). Conclusions:  Infant bottle-feeding habits (either allowing a child to sip from a bottle during the day or put to sleep at night) and ethnicity other than Caucasian were significant determinants for both anterior caries pattern and severity of ECC in 4–5-year-old Australian children.

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Impact of oral diseases and disorders on oral health-related quality of life of preschool children.

TL;DR: The severity of ECC and a lower family income had a negative impact on the OHRQoL of preschool children and their parents.
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TL;DR: A systematic review of the evidence for parental influences on the development of caries in children aged 0-6 years finds collaboration between Psychologists and Dentists may accelerate the identification and understanding of mechanisms that underlie risk associated with ECC.
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TL;DR: Underweight children and those with adverse socio-economic conditions were more likely to have caries experience, and there was an association between nutritional and socio- economic factors, and dental caries.
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Impact of traumatic dental injuries and malocclusions on quality of life of young children

TL;DR: Complicated traumatic dental injuries have a negative impact on the OHRQoL of preschool children and their parents, but anterior malocclusion traits do not.
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Early Feeding Practices and Severe Early Childhood Caries in Four-Year-Old Children from Southern Brazil: A Birth Cohort Study

TL;DR: Early feeding practices which represent risk factors for caries severity in subsequent years are identified and may contribute to developing general and oral health interventions, with special attention to families with low maternal education.
References
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Book

Logistic Regression. A Self- Learning Text

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a model for estimating the odds ratio in Logistic Regression using Maximum Likelihood Techniques (MLT) and a strategy for assessing Interaction and Confounding.
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Initial Acquisition of Mutans Streptococci by Infants: Evidence for a Discrete Window of Infectivity

TL;DR: It is reported for the first time that MS is acquired by infants during a defined period in the ontogeny of a child during a discrete period the authors designated as the "window of infectivity".
Journal Article

Risk factors for dental caries in young children: a systematic review of the literature.

TL;DR: There is a shortage of high quality studies using the optimum study design, i.e. a longitudinal study, which suggests that children are most likely to develop caries if Streptococcus Muttans is acquired at an early age, although this may be partly compensated by other factors such as good oral hygiene and a non-cariogenic diet.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Fidelity of Initial Acquisition of Mutans Streptococci by Infants from Their Mothers

TL;DR: The commonality of MS genotypes between mothers and their infants at the time of initial acquisition strongly suggests that MS strains were transmitted from mother to infant and that this transfer exhibited gender specificity.
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