AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines the prevalence of various oral behaviors among 1,424 patients at an Italian dental clinic using the Oral Behavior Checklist (OBC-21).
  • Findings show that a significant majority of patients (79.6%) had low-risk grades for oral behaviors, with yawning, snacking, and one-sided chewing being the most common habits.
  • Results also indicated that younger patients typically had lower OBC scores and females were more likely to exhibit high-risk behaviors compared to males. Future research is needed to explore potential negative impacts of these habits on oral health.

Article Abstract

Background: Oral behaviors represent a diverse array of habits beyond the physiological behaviors of the stomatognathic system.

Objective: To describe the prevalence of different oral behaviors, as reported with the Oral Behavior Checklist (OBC-21), in a convenience sample of patients attending an Italian university clinic for routine dental cares.

Methods: In this study, charts of adult patients presenting to the dental department of a regional hospital in Trieste, Italy, from January 2018 and January 2019 were reviewed. Patients with complete files were retrieved, and those with orofacial pain complaints were excluded. OBC-21 scores and grades (score of 0 corresponding to no risk, 1-24 to low risk, and higher than 24 to high risk) were analyzed and stratified according to age and sex.

Results: Data from a total of 1424 patients were reported. The overall mean OBC score was 13.3 ± 9.9, with 6.7% no-risk grade, 79.6% low-risk grade, and 13.7% high-risk grade. In general, mean OBC scores decreased with increasing age. Females showed a higher frequency of high-risk grade than males. Most frequent prevalent habits included yawning (73.1%), eating between meals (66.9%) and chewing food on one side only (63.3%). Other behaviors were also highly prevalent, including pressing, touching, or holding teeth together other than while eating (52.7%) and awake clenching (47.5%).

Conclusion: A low-risk grade of oral behaviors has been found to be frequent in our sample. Future studies are warranted to confirm these findings in larger, representative general populations and to assess if any of these habits are linked to negative effects on the stomatognathic system.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/joor.13427DOI Listing

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