Oral health and dietary habits: results of the 6th German Oral Health Study (DMS • 6).

IF 1.3 4区 医学 Q3 DENTISTRY, ORAL SURGERY & MEDICINE
Jutta Margraf-Stiksrud, A Rainer Jordan, Kathrin Kuhr, Renate Deinzer
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objectives: Dietary habits have significant implications for oral health, with the consumption of sugar-rich foods being strongly associated with caries. However, additional factors must be considered to fully establish their harmful effects. These relationships are examined in three age groups of the 6th German Oral Health Study (DMS • 6).

Method and materials: Dietary habits were assessed using the short form of the Marburg Sugar Index (MSI-S), which comprises six questions regarding food consumption frequencies in various contexts. Responses provide insight into the degree of cariogenic eating behavior. In addition to demographic factors (gender, education status, migration history), clinical variables such as caries experience (decayed, missing, filled teeth [DMFT] index), plaque accumulation (modified Marginal Plaque Index [mMPI]), and the number of remaining teeth were included.

Results: No direct relationship between the extent of cariogenic dietary habits (MSI-S total score) and clinical variables was observed in any of the examined age groups (n = 870 younger adolescents [12-year-olds], n = 853 younger adults [35- to 44-year-olds], and n = 730 younger seniors [65- to 74-year-olds]). Gender and education status also showed no significant differences. However, 12-year-olds with a migration history exhibited higher MSI-S scores compared to those without. Analyzing extreme groups (the top and bottom 10% of MSI-S scores), systematic differences in caries experience were observed among 12-year-olds and younger seniors, and in plaque levels among younger seniors. Younger adults showed no significant differences in clinical variables, even within extreme groups.

Conclusion: The MSI-S scores demonstrated that particularly cariogenic dietary habits, as opposed to more favorable ones (extreme groups), are associated with increased caries experience. This was especially evident among 12-year-olds but also observed in younger seniors. The lack of differences among adults as well as the absence of significant associations between dietary habits and clinical variables in the overall groups suggest that the impact of cariogenic diets on oral health is moderated by additional variables, such as oral hygiene practices and dental service utilization. Migration history was identified as a relevant factor among 12-year-olds. The detrimental effects of cariogenic dietary habits on oral health are most evident when analyzed in the context of additional influencing factors and stratified by target groups. Promoting oral health awareness regarding nutrition is particularly important for adolescents and seniors.

口腔健康和饮食习惯:第六次德国口腔健康研究(DMS•6)的结果。
目的:饮食习惯对口腔健康有重要影响,食用富含糖的食物与龋齿密切相关。然而,要充分确定它们的有害影响,还必须考虑其他因素。这些关系在第六届德国口腔健康研究(DMS•6)的三个年龄组中进行了检查。方法和材料:使用马尔堡糖指数(MSI-S)的简短形式评估饮食习惯,该指数包括六个关于不同情况下食物消费频率的问题。这些反应提供了对致龋性饮食行为程度的深入了解。除人口统计学因素(性别、受教育程度、移民史)外,还包括龋齿经历(蛀牙、缺牙、补牙[DMFT]指数)、牙菌斑积累(修正边际牙菌斑指数[mMPI])、剩余牙数等临床变量。结果:在所有被检查的年龄组(n = 870名青少年[12岁],n = 853名年轻人[35- 44岁],n = 730名年轻老年人[65- 74岁])中,未观察到患龋饮食习惯的程度(MSI-S总分)与临床变量之间的直接关系。性别和受教育程度也无显著差异。然而,有移民史的12岁儿童的MSI-S得分高于没有移民史的12岁儿童。分析极端群体(MSI-S得分的前10%和后10%),观察到12岁儿童和较年轻的老年人在龋齿经历方面的系统性差异,以及较年轻的老年人在牙菌斑水平方面的系统性差异。年轻人在临床变量上没有显著差异,即使在极端群体中也是如此。结论:MSI-S评分表明,与更有利的饮食习惯(极端群体)相反,特别易患龋齿的饮食习惯与龋齿经历的增加有关。这在12岁的孩子中尤为明显,但在更年轻的老年人中也能观察到。成年人之间没有差异,总体各组饮食习惯和临床变量之间也没有显著关联,这表明,蛀牙饮食对口腔健康的影响被其他变量(如口腔卫生习惯和牙科服务利用)所缓和。移民历史被认为是12岁儿童的相关因素。当在其他影响因素的背景下进行分析并按目标人群分层时,患龋饮食习惯对口腔健康的有害影响最为明显。促进有关营养的口腔健康意识对青少年和老年人尤为重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Quintessence international
Quintessence international 医学-牙科与口腔外科
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
5.30%
发文量
11
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: QI has a new contemporary design but continues its time-honored tradition of serving the needs of the general practitioner with clinically relevant articles that are scientifically based. Dr Eli Eliav and his editorial board are dedicated to practitioners worldwide through the presentation of high-level research, useful clinical procedures, and educational short case reports and clinical notes. Rigorous but timely manuscript review is the first order of business in their quest to publish a high-quality selection of articles in the multiple specialties and disciplines that encompass dentistry.
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