Title
Author
DOI
Article Type
Special Issue
Volume
Issue
Characteristics of Children Under 6 Years of Age Treated for Early Chidhood Caries in South Africa
1Department of Paediatric Dentistry, University of the Western Cape
2,Department of Community Health University of Stellenbosch
*Corresponding Author(s): Nadia Mohamed E-mail: namohamed@uwc.ac.za hidmoh@iafrica.com
Objective: This retrospective survey highlighted the characteristics of children less than six years of age presenting with early childhood caries(ECC) who had two or more teeth extracted under intravenous sedation at the Tygerberg Oral Health Centre in Cape Town, South Africa. This survey was carried out in order to plan a community-appropriate intervention strategy. Methods: Records of 140 patients kept by the pediatric Dentistry Division met the inclusion criteria and were included in this survey. Most of the patients originate from economically disadvantaged areas. Results: Diet, feeding and oral hygiene habits were shown to be the most significant factors that contributed to the development of ECC in these patients. All the children were either breast- or bottle-fed past one year of age. 93.6% of the children went to sleep with the bottle or while on the breast and 90% of them were fed on demand during the night. On average, breastfeeding was stopped at 9 months of age compared to bottle-feeding that, on average, was stopped at a much later mean age of 23 months. Where oral hygiene practices were concerned, 52.6% of children brushed their own teeth without supervision. Frequency of brushing varied between subjects. Conclusion: The results of this study have demonstrated that there is a need for culturally appropriate education campaigns to inform parents (especially those in disadvantaged communities) about the importance of oral health and the prevention of oral disease.
early childhood caries, nursing caries, dental, children, bottle-feeding, breastfeeding
Nadia Mohamed,Jo Barnes. Characteristics of Children Under 6 Years of Age Treated for Early Chidhood Caries in South Africa. Journal of Clinical Pediatric Dentistry. 2008. 32(3);247-252.
1. Albert RJ, Cantin RY, Cross HG, Castaldi CR. Nursing caries in the Inuit children. J Can Dent Assn, 54: 751–758, 1988.
2. American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry. Guideline on infant oral health care. Ped Dent, 24(7): 47, 2002.
3. Berkowitz R Etiology of Nursing Caries: a Microbiologic Perspective. Journal of Pub Health Dent, 56(1): 51–54, 1996.
4. Bowen WH, Pearson SK, Rosalen PL, Miguel JC, Shih AY. Assessing the cariogenic potential of some infant formulas, milk and sugar solu-tions. JADA, 128: 865–871, 1997.
5. Cameron AC & Widmer RP Handbook of Pediatric Dentistry, 2nd Edi-tion, pp 60-63. Elsevier Ltd. 2003.
6. Davenport ES. Caries in the preschool child: aetiology. J Dent, 18: 300–303, 1990.
7. Derksen GD & Ponti P Nursing bottle syndrome: prevalence and etiol-ogy in a non-fluoridated city. JCan Dent Assn, 8: 389–393, 1982.
8. Dilley GJ, Dilley DH, Machen JB Prolonged nursing habit: a profile of patients and their families. J Dent Child, 47: 102–108, 1980.
9. Freeman L, Martin, S, Rutenberg G, Shirejian P, Skarie M. Relationship between def, demographic and behavioural variables among multiracial preschool children. J Dent Child, 3: 205–10. 1989
10. Holt RD. Caries in the preschool child: British trends. J Dent, 18: 296–299, 1990.
11. Johnsen DC, Gerstenmaier JH, Schwartz E, Michal BC, Parrish S. Background comparisons of pre-31/2-year-old children with nursing caries in four practice settings. Ped Dent, 6 (1): 50–54, 1984.
12. Kelly M and Bruerd B. The prevalence of baby bottle decay among two Native American populations. J Pub Health Dent, 47: 94–97, 1987.
13. Kennedy DB, Curzon MEJ, Roberts JF. Paediatric Operative Dentistry, 4th Edition, pp 6-9. Butterworth-Heinemann Ltd. 1996
14. Lee C, Rezaiamira N, Jeffcott, Oberg D, Domoto P, Weinstein P () Teaching parents at WIC clinics to examine their high caries risk babies. J Dent Child, 61: 347–349, 1994
15. Milnes AR. Description and epidemiology of nursing caries. J Public Health Dent, 56 (1): 38–50, 1996.
16. Peters R. Risk factors in the nursing caries syndrome: a literature sur-vey. J South African Dent Assn, 49: 168–175, 1994.
17. Phillips MG and Stubbs PE. Head Start combats baby bottle tooth decay among native American families. Children Today, 16: 25-28, 1987.
18. Ripa LW Nursing caries: a comprehensive review. Ped Dent, 10, 268–282, 1988.
19. Tsubouchi J, Tsubouchi M, Maynard RJ, Domoto PK, Weinstein P. A study of dental caries and risk factors among Native American infants. J Dent Child, 62 (4): 283–287, 1995.
20. Vanobbergen J, Martens L, Lesaffre E, Bogaerts K, Declerck D. Assess-ing the risk indicators for dental caries in the primary dentition. Comm Dent Oral Epid, 29 (6): 424–434, 2001.
21. Van Wyk PJ, Louw AJ, du Plessis JB. Caries status and treatment needs in South Africa: Report of the 1999–2002 National Children’s Oral Health Survey. South African Dent J, 59 (6): 238–242, 2004.
22. Verrips GH, Kalsbeek H, Eijkman MA Ethnicity and maternal educa-tion as risk indicators for dental caries, and the role of dental behaviour. Comm Dent Oral Epid, 21: 209–14, 1993.
23. Winter GB. Caries in the preschool child. J Dent, 18: 322–323, 1990.
Science Citation Index Expanded (SciSearch) Created as SCI in 1964, Science Citation Index Expanded now indexes over 9,500 of the world’s most impactful journals across 178 scientific disciplines. More than 53 million records and 1.18 billion cited references date back from 1900 to present.
Biological Abstracts Easily discover critical journal coverage of the life sciences with Biological Abstracts, produced by the Web of Science Group, with topics ranging from botany to microbiology to pharmacology. Including BIOSIS indexing and MeSH terms, specialized indexing in Biological Abstracts helps you to discover more accurate, context-sensitive results.
Google Scholar Google Scholar is a freely accessible web search engine that indexes the full text or metadata of scholarly literature across an array of publishing formats and disciplines.
JournalSeek Genamics JournalSeek is the largest completely categorized database of freely available journal information available on the internet. The database presently contains 39226 titles. Journal information includes the description (aims and scope), journal abbreviation, journal homepage link, subject category and ISSN.
Current Contents - Clinical Medicine Current Contents - Clinical Medicine provides easy access to complete tables of contents, abstracts, bibliographic information and all other significant items in recently published issues from over 1,000 leading journals in clinical medicine.
BIOSIS Previews BIOSIS Previews is an English-language, bibliographic database service, with abstracts and citation indexing. It is part of Clarivate Analytics Web of Science suite. BIOSIS Previews indexes data from 1926 to the present.
Journal Citation Reports/Science Edition Journal Citation Reports/Science Edition aims to evaluate a journal’s value from multiple perspectives including the journal impact factor, descriptive data about a journal’s open access content as well as contributing authors, and provide readers a transparent and publisher-neutral data & statistics information about the journal.
Scopus: CiteScore 1.8 (2023) Scopus is Elsevier's abstract and citation database launched in 2004. Scopus covers nearly 36,377 titles (22,794 active titles and 13,583 Inactive titles) from approximately 11,678 publishers, of which 34,346 are peer-reviewed journals in top-level subject fields: life sciences, social sciences, physical sciences and health sciences.
Top