Fit for School Inc, Salcedo Village, Makati City, Manila, Philippines.
BMC Public Health. 2011 Jul 13;11:558. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-11-558.
Dental decay is the most common childhood disease worldwide and most of the decay remains untreated. In the Philippines caries levels are among the highest in the South East Asian region. Elementary school children suffer from high prevalence of stunting and underweight.The present study aimed to investigate the association between untreated dental decay and Body Mass Index (BMI) among 12-year-old Filipino children.
Data collection was part of the National Oral Health Survey, a representative cross-sectional study of 1951 11-13-year-old school children using a modified, stratified cluster sampling design based on population classifications of the Philippine National Statistics Office. Caries was scored according to WHO criteria (1997) and odontogenic infections using the PUFA index. Anthropometric measures were performed by trained nurses. Some socio-economic determinants were included as potential confounding factors.
The overall prevalence of caries (DMFT + dmft > 0) was 82.3% (95%CI; 80.6%-84.0%). The overall prevalence of odontogenic infections due to caries (PUFA + pufa > 0) was 55.7% (95% CI; 53.5%-57.9%) The BMI of 27.1% (95%CI; 25.1%-29.1%) of children was below normal, 1% (95%CI; 0.5%-1.4%) had a BMI above normal. The regression coefficient between BMI and caries was highly significant (p < 0.001). Children with odontogenic infections (PUFA + pufa > 0) as compared to those without odontogenic infections had an increased risk of a below normal BMI (OR: 1.47; 95% CI: 1.19-1.80).
This is the first-ever representative survey showing a significant association between caries and BMI and particularly between odontogenic infections and below normal BMI. An expanded model of hypothesised associations is presented that includes progressed forms of dental decay as a significant, yet largely neglected determinant of poor child development.
龋齿是全球最常见的儿童疾病,而大部分龋齿仍然未经治疗。在菲律宾,龋齿发病率在东南亚地区是最高的。小学生普遍存在发育迟缓与体重不足的问题。本研究旨在调查菲律宾 12 岁儿童中未经治疗的龋齿与身体质量指数(BMI)之间的关系。
数据收集是国家口腔健康调查的一部分,这是一项针对 1951 名 11-13 岁在校儿童的代表性横断面研究,采用基于菲律宾国家统计局人口分类的改良分层聚类抽样设计。龋齿按照世界卫生组织(1997 年)标准和使用 PUFA 指数的牙源性感染进行评分。由经过培训的护士进行人体测量。将一些社会经济决定因素纳入潜在混杂因素。
总体龋齿患病率(DMFT + dmft>0)为 82.3%(95%CI;80.6%-84.0%)。总体因龋齿导致的牙源性感染患病率(PUFA + pufa>0)为 55.7%(95%CI;53.5%-57.9%)。27.1%(95%CI;25.1%-29.1%)的儿童 BMI 低于正常值,1%(95%CI;0.5%-1.4%)的儿童 BMI 高于正常值。BMI 与龋齿之间的回归系数具有高度显著性(p<0.001)。与无牙源性感染的儿童相比,有牙源性感染(PUFA + pufa>0)的儿童 BMI 低于正常值的风险增加(OR:1.47;95%CI:1.19-1.80)。
这是首次代表调查显示龋齿与 BMI 之间存在显著关联,尤其是牙源性感染与 BMI 低于正常值之间存在显著关联。提出了一个扩展的假设关联模型,其中包括作为儿童发育不良的重要但在很大程度上被忽视的决定因素的进展性龋齿形式。