夏威夷各族群间继发牙列爆发变异的定量评估。

Hawaii dental journal Pub Date : 2008-03-01
Mark H K Greer, Kevin J Loo
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摘要

尽管很少有科学证据支持为太平洋岛民治疗的牙医的观点,即该地区许多儿童的次牙长得更早,而且长牙的速度超过高加索儿童。基于1998-1999学年在夏威夷创建的26,097名公立学校学生的数据集,有机会检查喷发时间和顺序的差异。夏威夷是一个种族多元化的社区,大多数人口由亚洲人和太平洋岛民组成。对5至9岁的儿童进行了性别和种族差异检查。总的来说,在所有年龄段,女孩都比男孩早出牙,然而,虽然在个别牙齿类型中通常是正确的,但这种差异并不总是具有统计学意义。从种族上看,非裔美国人比白种人表现出更早的爆发,但白种人的爆发时间比白人早9岁。夏威夷、萨摩亚和汤加土著儿童比白人或非洲裔美国儿童表现出更早和更高的继发牙列爆发率。与白种人相比,不同亚洲群体的儿童没有表现出显著的差异。基于这些发现,作者建议夏威夷、萨摩亚和汤加土著儿童从出生时就开始补充膳食氟化物,而不是6个月大,这些儿童早在5岁时就应该接受牙槽和裂隙密封剂的治疗。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Quantitative evaluation of variance in secondary dentition eruption among ethnic groups in Hawai'i.

Though little scientific evidence existed to support the belief among dentists who treat Pacific Islander populations that many children of the region erupt secondary teeth earlier and at an eruption rate which exceeds Caucasian children. Based upon a data set created in Hawai'i during the 1998-1999 school year, of 26,097 public school children, the opportunity presented itself to examine for variance in eruption timing and sequence. Hawai'i is an ethnic diverse community, with a majority population comprised of Asians and Pacific Islanders. Children, 5 through 9 years of age, were examined for gender and ethnic variance. In the aggregate, at all ages, girls erupted teeth earlier than boys, however, while generally true among individual tooth types, that variance was not always statistically significant. By ethnic group, African Americans exhibited earlier eruption by contrast with Caucasians, however, Caucasian children caught up by nine years of age. Native Hawaiian, Samoan and Tongan children exhibited earlier and high rates of secondary dentition eruption than Caucasian or African American children. Children of various Asian cohorts did not exhibit significant variance by contrast with Caucasians. Based upon these findings, the authors recommend that dietary fluoride supplementation of Native Hawaiian, Samoan and Tongan children begin at birth rather than six months of age and that these children be targeted for pit & fissure sealants as early as five years of age.

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