Artigo Revisado por pares

Decayed, missing, and filled teeth among elderly people in a Norwegian municipality

1986; Informa; Volume: 44; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.3109/00016358609041317

ISSN

1502-3850

Autores

Eirik Ambjøsrnsen,

Tópico(s)

Forensic Anthropology and Bioarchaeology Studies

Resumo

The purpose of the present study was to describe and analyze the prevalence of decayed, missing, and filled teeth among dentate non-institutionalized and institutionalized old-age pensioners from the same population. A random sample of 430 persons was drawn from the total population of pensioners in Skedsmo (N = 3072), yielding 159 non-institutionalized with their own teeth as one study group. The second study group consisted of all dentate elderly institutionalized persons (n = 38) from the same municipality. Of the non-institutionalized pensioners 48% had untreated caries lesions (DT = 1.1), and 87% had one or more fillings (FT = 8.8). The mean number of MT was 14.1. The oldest non-institutionalized pensioners (80+ years) had more MT and fewer FT than the younger ones (67-79 years). Only small differences in DT, MT, and FT were seen between the sexes in the youngest age group, whereas in the oldest age group (80+) the men had more DT and fewer FT than the women. Dental visiting habits and age were the most important predictors of DT%. The multivariate models provided best fit for FT% (R2 = 27%), DT% came second (R2 = 15%), and poorest fit was observed for DMFT (R2 = 2%). The institutionalized persons had more DT, MT, and residual roots, higher DMFT, but fewer FT than the non-institutionalized ones. Among the institutionalized pensioners a somewhat different sex-related pattern emerged; women tended to have lower DMFT and fewer residual roots than had men, regardless of age.

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