Department of Health Professions, School of Health Professions and Human Services, Hofstra University, Hempstead, NY, USA.
Department of Environmental Medicine and Public Health, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY, USA.
BMC Oral Health. 2021 Oct 22;21(1):545. doi: 10.1186/s12903-021-01902-8.
Dental fluorosis can be a disease of social inequity in access to safe drinking water. This dental public health issue becomes prominent in socially disadvantaged agrarian communities in fluoride endemic areas where the standard irrigation system is unavailable and groundwater containing natural fluoride is the major drinking water source. This study aimed to determine the prevalence and severity of dental fluorosis in children and to evaluate its association with fluoride in groundwater in the aforementioned setting in Thailand.
A cross-sectional survey of 289 children in Nakhon Pathom Province was conducted in 2015. Children with very mild to severe fluorosis were regarded as 'cases' while their counterparts were 'controls' for a subsequent case-control study. Records of fluoride concentrations in groundwater used for household supply corresponding to resident and number of years by age of each child during 2008-2015 were retrieved. Other exposure variables were measured using a questionnaire. Prevalence ratio (PR), a measure indicating the relative effect of different levels of fluoride on dental fluorosis, was obtained from Poisson regression with robust standard error.
There were 157 children with very mild to moderate dental fluorosis (54.3% prevalence). The univariable analysis revealed that the prevalence of dental fluorosis among children with fluoride concentrations in water sources of 0.7-1.49 (index category 1) and ≥ 1.5 ppm (index category 2) was 1.62 (95% CI; 0.78, 3.34) and 2.75 (95% CI; 1.42, 5.31) times the prevalence among those with fluoride < 0.7 ppm (referent category). After adjusting for all covariates, the adjusted prevalence ratios in both index categories were 1.64 (95% CI; 0.24, 11.24) and 2.85 (95% CI; 0.44, 18.52) which were close to their corresponding crude estimates. Since the magnitude of confounding, measured by (PR-PR)/PR, were less than 10% for both index categories; this indicated the limited confounding effect of all covariates.
In fluoride endemic areas, groundwater containing natural fluoride utilized for household consumption resulted in high dental fluorosis prevalence, particularly in the groundwater with fluoride concentrations of ≥ 1.5 ppm.
氟斑牙可能是获得安全饮用水方面的社会不公平现象。在氟中毒地区,缺乏标准灌溉系统且地下水含有天然氟化物作为主要饮用水源的社会弱势农业社区中,这种口腔公共卫生问题尤为突出。本研究旨在确定泰国上述地区儿童氟斑牙的流行率和严重程度,并评估其与地下水中氟化物的关系。
2015 年,在那空巴吞府对 289 名儿童进行了横断面调查。将有轻度至重度氟斑牙的儿童视为“病例”,而他们的同龄人则为随后的病例对照研究中的“对照”。检索了 2008 年至 2015 年期间,与每个儿童居住和年龄相对应的家庭供水用地下水的氟化物浓度记录。使用问卷测量了其他暴露变量。采用泊松回归模型和稳健标准差获得了表示不同氟化物水平对氟斑牙相对影响的患病率比(PR)。
共有 157 名儿童患有轻度至中度氟斑牙(患病率为 54.3%)。单变量分析显示,水源中氟化物浓度为 0.7-1.49(指数类别 1)和≥1.5ppm(指数类别 2)的儿童中氟斑牙的患病率分别为氟化物浓度低于 0.7ppm(参照类别)儿童的 1.62(95%CI;0.78,3.34)和 2.75(95%CI;1.42,5.31)倍。在调整了所有协变量后,两个指数类别中的调整后患病率比分别为 1.64(95%CI;0.24,11.24)和 2.85(95%CI;0.44,18.52),这与各自的粗估计值接近。由于两个指数类别中混杂的程度(以 PR-PR/PR 表示)均小于 10%,这表明所有协变量的混杂影响有限。
在氟中毒地区,家庭使用的天然氟化物地下水导致了高氟斑牙的流行率,尤其是在氟化物浓度≥1.5ppm 的地下水中。