Ismail Amid I, Sohn Woosung, Tellez Marisol, Willem Jenefer M, Betz James, Lepkowski James
Department of Cariology, Restorative Sciences, and Endodontics, School of Dentistry, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1078, USA.
Community Dent Oral Epidemiol. 2008 Feb;36(1):55-68. doi: 10.1111/j.1600-0528.2006.00369.x.
While national surveys have found that African-Americans have a higher prevalence and severity of dental caries than white-Americans, there are only a few descriptive studies of the prevalence and severity of dental caries in low-income urban African-Americans.
This study assessed the prevalence, severity and determinants of dental caries, using the International Caries Detection and Assessment System (ICDAS).
A representative sample of low-income families (a caregiver and a child aged 0-5 years) was selected from low-income census tracts in the city of Detroit, Michigan. Of the 12,655 randomly selected housing units, 10,695 were occupied and 9781 were successfully contacted (91.5%). There were 1386 families with eligible children in the contacted households; and of those, 1021 were interviewed and examined at a permanent examination center organized for this study. This represents an overall response rate of 73.7%. At the center, trained staff interviewed the main caregivers of the selected children, and trained and calibrated dentists examined the caregiver and her/his child. Data used in this study included information gathered from the social, behavioral and parenting questionnaires, the Block Food Frequency Questionnaire (total sugar intake), and data collected from community and census databases.
Over 90% of the adults (ages 14-70 years, average 29.3) had at least one noncavitated carious lesion and 82.2% had at least one primary cavitated lesion. Negative binomial regression models found that the age of caregivers and the number of churches in neighborhoods were negatively associated with the number of noncavitated tooth surfaces. Cavitated tooth surfaces were positively associated with age, oral hygiene status, being worried about teeth, a recent visit to a dentist, and the number of grocery stores in the neighborhoods. However, the number of cavitated tooth surfaces was negatively associated with preventive dental visits, positive rating of oral health status and the number of dentists in a community.
Dental caries, especially at the noncavitated stage, is highly prevalent in low-income African-American adults in Detroit. A significant increase in the mean number of missing teeth was observed after the age of 34 years. This study found that different individual, social, and community risk indicators were associated with noncavitated versus cavitated tooth surfaces.
尽管全国性调查发现非裔美国人的龋齿患病率和严重程度高于美国白人,但针对低收入城市非裔美国人龋齿患病率和严重程度的描述性研究却很少。
本研究使用国际龋病检测与评估系统(ICDAS)评估龋齿的患病率、严重程度及相关决定因素。
从密歇根州底特律市低收入普查区选取了具有代表性的低收入家庭样本(一名照料者和一名0至5岁儿童)。在随机抽取的12,655个住房单元中,10,695个有人居住,9781个成功联系上(91.5%)。在联系到的家庭中有1386个家庭有符合条件的儿童;其中,1021个家庭在为本研究设立的永久性检查中心接受了访谈和检查。这代表总体应答率为73.7%。在该中心,经过培训的工作人员对选定儿童的主要照料者进行访谈,经过培训且校准过的牙医对照料者及其孩子进行检查。本研究使用的数据包括从社会、行为和育儿问卷、布洛克食物频率问卷(总糖摄入量)收集的信息,以及从社区和人口普查数据库收集的数据。
超过90%的成年人(年龄在14至70岁之间,平均29.3岁)至少有一处非龋性龋损,82.2%的人至少有一处原发性龋洞。负二项回归模型发现,照料者的年龄和社区内教堂的数量与非龋性牙面的数量呈负相关。龋洞性牙面与年龄、口腔卫生状况、对牙齿的担忧、近期看牙医情况以及社区内杂货店的数量呈正相关。然而,龋洞性牙面的数量与预防性看牙、对口腔健康状况的积极评价以及社区内牙医的数量呈负相关。
龋齿,尤其是在非龋性阶段,在底特律低收入非裔美国成年人中非常普遍。34岁以后,平均缺牙数显著增加。本研究发现,不同的个体、社会和社区风险指标与非龋性和龋洞性牙面有关。