Community Dent Oral Epidemiol 2001
Feb;29(1):37-47
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Patterns of dental caries
following the cessation of water fluoridation.
Maupome G, Clark DC, Levy SM, Berkowitz
J
Faculty of Dentistry, University of British
Columbia, Vancouver, Canada. gerardo.maupome@kp.org
[Medline record in process]
OBJECTIVES: To compare prevalence and incidence
of caries between fluoridation-ended and still-fluoridated communities in
British Columbia, Canada, from a baseline survey and after three years. METHODS:
At the baseline (1993/4 academic year) and follow-up (1996/7) surveys, children
were examined at their schools. Data were collected on snacking, oral hygiene,
exposure to fluoride technologies, and socio-economic level. These variables
were used together with D1D2MFS indices in multiple regression models. RESULTS: The
prevalence of caries (assessed in 5,927 children, grades 2, 3, 8, 9) decreased
over time in the fluoridation-ended community while remaining unchanged in the
fluoridated community. While numbers of filled surfaces did not vary
between surveys, sealed surfaces increased at both study sites. Caries incidence
(assessed in 2,994 life-long residents, grades 5, 6, 11, 12) expressed in terms
of D1D2MFS was not different between the still-fluoridating and
fluoridation-ended communities. There were, however, differences in caries
experienced when D1D2MFS components and surfaces at risk were investigated in
detail. Regression models did not identify specific variables markedly affecting
changes in the incidence of dental decay. CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest a
complicated pattern of disease following cessation of fluoridation. Multiple
sources of fluoride besides water fluoridation have made it more difficult to
detect changes in the epidemiological profile of a population with generally low
caries experience, and living in an affluent setting with widely accessible
dental services. There are, however, subtle differences in caries and caries
treatment experience between children living in fluoridated and
fluoridation-ended areas.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov:80/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=
PubMed&list_uids=11153562&dopt=Abstract
PMID: 11153562, UI: 21026421