Spivak Karina, Hayes Catherine, Maguire James H
Harvard School of Dental Medicine, 7 Yarmouth Place, Apt. #2, Boston, MA 02116, USA.
Community Dent Oral Epidemiol. 2004 Feb;32(1):1-9. doi: 10.1111/j.1600-0528.2004.00003.x.
Several studies investigating the oral health status of children living in Ukraine after the Chernobyl catastrophe revealed an increase of caries in children residing in radionucleotide-contaminated areas.
(1) To compare prevalence of dental caries in contaminated and noncontaminated towns; and (2) to determine if there is a difference between dental behaviors and attitudes of children residing in contaminated and noncontaminated areas that may have contributed to differences in caries prevalence.
Children aged 13-14 were randomly selected in two towns of approximately the same population size (33 000): Ovruch (n = 119) from a contaminated area and Mirgorod (n = 100) from a noncontaminated area. Data on behaviors and attitudes were collected via a self-administered questionnaire having six domains: (i) family background; (ii) dental anxiety; (iii) dental utilization; (iv) oral hygiene; (v) use of fluoride toothpaste; and (vi) sugar consumption. Oral examinations included information on carious lesions, restorations, missing teeth, and soft tissue abnormalities. Caries prevalence was compared using a t-test. Regression analysis was conducted to determine the independent contribution of oral hygiene behaviors and dental utilization.
There was a significant difference in caries prevalence in the contaminated town (mean DMFT = 9.1 +/- 3.5) versus the noncontaminated town (mean DMFT = 5.7 +/- 1.4; P < 0.000). Oral hygiene practices, age, and utilization of dental services were not found to be associated with differences in DMFT score between the two communities.
There was a significantly higher caries prevalence in a radiation-contaminated town compared to a noncontaminated town of Ukraine. The difference was not explained by differences in oral health knowledge, attitudes or behaviors.
多项研究调查了切尔诺贝利灾难后乌克兰儿童的口腔健康状况,结果显示居住在放射性核素污染地区的儿童龋齿患病率有所上升。
(1)比较污染城镇和未污染城镇的龋齿患病率;(2)确定居住在污染地区和未污染地区的儿童在口腔行为和态度上是否存在差异,这些差异可能导致了龋齿患病率的不同。
在两个规模大致相同(33000人)的城镇中随机选取13 - 14岁的儿童:来自污染地区的奥夫鲁奇(n = 119)和来自未污染地区的米尔戈罗德(n = 100)。通过一份包含六个领域的自填问卷收集行为和态度数据:(i)家庭背景;(ii)牙科焦虑;(iii)牙科就诊情况;(iv)口腔卫生;(v)含氟牙膏的使用;(vi)糖的摄入量。口腔检查包括龋齿病变、修复体、缺失牙和软组织异常的信息。使用t检验比较龋齿患病率。进行回归分析以确定口腔卫生行为和牙科就诊情况的独立影响。
污染城镇的龋齿患病率(平均DMFT = 9.1 +/- 3.5)与未污染城镇(平均DMFT = 5.7 +/- 1.4;P < 0.000)存在显著差异。未发现口腔卫生习惯、年龄和牙科服务的使用情况与两个社区之间DMFT评分的差异有关。
与乌克兰的一个未污染城镇相比,一个受辐射污染的城镇龋齿患病率显著更高。这种差异无法通过口腔健康知识、态度或行为的差异来解释。