Edwards Paul C, Levering Nicholas, Wetzel Erin, Saini Tarnjit
Department of Periodontics and Oral Medicine, Division of Oral Pathology, Medicine and Radiology, University of Michigan School of Dentistry, 1011 N. University Ave., Office 2029E, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1078, USA.
J Am Dent Assoc. 2008 Apr;139(4):442-50. doi: 10.14219/jada.archive.2008.0187.
Ebinyo is a form of infant oral mutilation (IOM), widely practiced in rural areas of eastern Africa, in which traditional healers and other village elders extirpate the primary canine tooth follicles of infants by using crude, often unsterilized, instruments or utensils. Traditional folklore suggests that the underlying tooth follicles, thought to resemble worms, are the cause of high temperature, vomiting, loss of appetite and diarrhea in infants. In addition to the serious and potentially fatal immediate postsurgical complications, many of those who undergo this practice exhibit characteristic long-term adverse dentoalveolar effects. Children in these families also may be at greater risk of undergoing other mutilation rituals because of their cultural background.
We report on the clinical and radiographic findings in five siblings who apparently were subjected to IOM as infants before immigrating to the United States.
Although the practice of IOM is believed to be exceedingly rare in developed countries, it is important that dentists and allied dental personnel who treat refugees from areas of the world in which IOM is endemic be aware of the social factors behind this practice as well as be able to recognize its dental and psychological sequelae.
埃宾约是一种婴儿口腔切割术(IOM),在东非农村地区广泛存在,传统治疗师和其他村里的长辈会用简陋且通常未经消毒的器械或器具摘除婴儿的乳尖牙牙囊。传统民俗认为,被认为类似蠕虫的潜在牙囊是婴儿高烧、呕吐、食欲不振和腹泻的原因。除了严重且可能致命的术后即刻并发症外,许多接受这种手术的人还表现出典型的长期牙牙槽不良影响。由于文化背景,这些家庭中的儿童也可能面临接受其他残害仪式的更大风险。
我们报告了五名兄弟姐妹的临床和影像学检查结果,他们在移民到美国之前显然在婴儿期遭受了婴儿口腔切割术。
尽管在发达国家,婴儿口腔切割术被认为极为罕见,但治疗来自婴儿口腔切割术流行地区难民的牙医和牙科相关人员必须了解这种手术背后的社会因素,并能够识别其牙齿和心理后遗症,这一点很重要。