Timing of first fillings in the primary dentition and permanent first molars of asthmatic children.

Acta Odontol Scand

Institute of Dentistry, Oulu University Hospital, University of Oulu, Finland.

Published: February 1998

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study examined the timing of dental fillings in 51 asthmatic children and 102 healthy children from Ostrobothnia, Finland, focusing on primary and permanent teeth.
  • - Results indicated no significant difference in fillings for permanent first molars, but asthmatic children had notably higher filling rates in primary molars, with a significant risk ratio of 2.565 for upper first primary molars.
  • - The findings suggest that asthma-related factors might elevate the risk of dental caries, advocating for longer-term studies to further assess the impact on permanent teeth.

Article Abstract

The aim of this study was to analyze the timing of first fillings posteruptively in a cohort comprising 51 asthmatic children receiving inhaled corticosteroids and living in three communities in Ostrobothnia, Finland. They had all been born in the 1980s and had had asthma check-ups in the local asthma policlinic. A group of 102 healthy age- and sex-matched children served as controls. A longitudinal survival analysis of the timing of the first filling in the primary teeth and first permanent molars was conducted retrospectively using data from the annual dental health records. The timing of the first fillings in permanent first molars showed no statistically significant differences between asthmatic and healthy children, but the filling increments in the primary molars were consistently higher in the asthmatic group; the difference for the upper first primary molars was, for instance, statistically significant (risk ratio = 2.565; 95% confidence interval = 1.333-4.935). More extractions because of caries were also performed on primary molars in the asthmatic children. The findings support the hypothesis that factors related to the asthmatic condition might increase the risk of caries. A longer surveillance time would be needed to evaluate the effect of asthma on the permanent dentition.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/000163598423018DOI Listing

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