Artigo Revisado por pares

Number of teeth and risk of root caries

2000; Wiley; Volume: 17; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1111/j.1741-2358.2000.00091.x

ISSN

1741-2358

Autores

Belinda Nicolau, Patcharawan Srisilapana, Wagner Marcenes,

Tópico(s)

Dental Research and COVID-19

Resumo

This study aimed to investigate the association between number of natural teeth and prevalence of root caries.A cross-sectional design was adopted. A stratified multi-stage purposive sampling method was used to select a wide range of elderly people from all social classes, educational levels and sexes. Data was collected through interviews and clinical examinations.Urban area in Chiang Mai-Thailand.549 elderly dentate aged 60-74 years.Teeth with decay and filled roots (DF-T).The prevalence of root caries was 18.2% with a mean DF-T of 0.58 (S.D. 2.02). Results of multiple logistic regression showed that number of teeth, DMF-S scores, sex, and socio economic factors were statistically significantly associated with root caries (P < 0.05). Adjusted odds ratios demonstrated a 14% increase in the chance of having root caries when the number of teeth increased one unit. Similarly, a 3% increase was observed for each unit increase in the DMF-S scores (p < 0.001). Being male, having more than four years of education and earning more than 1500 baht/month increased the chances of root caries by 76%, 139% and 85% respectively (p < 0.001). Recession and age were not statistically significantly associated with root caries.Having more teeth, higher DMF-S scores, earning more than 1500 baht/month, having more than 4 years of education and being male increased the likelihood of having root caries.

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