CARIOGENICITY OF FOODS: AN EPIDEMIOLOGICAL APPROACH (DENTAL, SUGAR, SOFT DRINKS, ADHESIVENESS, DESSERTS SNACKS).

LDR 04375nam a22003617 4500
001 002158981
003 MiAaHDL
005 20240704000000.0
006 m d
007 cr bn ---auaua
007 hd|afb|||baca
008 900809s1984 miu|||| |b||| 00|00|eng d
035 ‡a(MiU)990021589810106381
035 ‡asdr-miu.990021589810106381
035 ‡z(MiU)MIU01000000000000002158981-goog
035 ‡a(OCoLC)68295154
035 ‡a(UMI)08501408
035 ‡z(MiU)Aleph002158981
040 ‡aUMI ‡cUMI ‡dMiU
099 ‡aUMI diss--UM
100 1 ‡aIsmail, Amid I. ‡1http://viaf.org/viaf/194521234
245 1 0 ‡aCARIOGENICITY OF FOODS: AN EPIDEMIOLOGICAL APPROACH (DENTAL, SUGAR, SOFT DRINKS, ADHESIVENESS, DESSERTS SNACKS).
260 ‡c1984.
300 ‡a262 p.
502 ‡aDISSERTATION (DR.P.H.)--THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN
510 4 ‡aDissertation Abstracts International, ‡c45-11B, p. 3462, AAF8501408
520 8 ‡aIn conclusion, the probability of high DMFT experience was most strongly associated with reported consumption of sweetened soft drinks, table sugars and syrups, sugary desserts and snacks, and crackers. No consistent association was found between high DMFT scores and the consumption of breakfast cereals, coffee, chocolate and tea drinks, ice cream, sweetened and unsweetened fruit juices, artificially sweetened beverages, and bread.
520 8 ‡aconsumption of other sugary foods) were accounted for. The attributable risk analysis revealed that if those with high DMFT scores did abstain from consuming from the food groups identified as cariogenic (sweetened soft drinks, table sugars and syrups, sugary desserts and snacks and crackers), then 30.0 percent of them could have low DMFT scores.
520 8 ‡aregression model. However, when the possibility of the concurrent consumption of table sugars and syrups was accounted for, the amount of breakfast cereals consumed did not remain a significant risk factor. The reported amount and frequency of between-meal consumption of coffee, chocolate, and tea drinks were also associated with high DMFT scores; however, the apparent associations were not found when the differences between the high and low DMFT groups in the potential confounders (including the
520 8 ‡aResults of the study revealed that the between-meal consumption of table sugars and syrups and crackers, and the at- and between-meal consumption of sweetened soft drinks and sugary desserts and snacks is associated with higher probability of having high caries scores, while the consumption of bread, sweetened and unsweetened fruit juices, ice cream, and artificially sweetened beverages is not. The amount of breakfast cereals consumed at meals was significantly associated with high DMFT scores in the
520 8 ‡athe 24-hour dietary record of the sampled individuals. Food groups were determined based upon similarity of food types, e.g. soft drinks, breakfast cereals. Strength of conclusions is restrained because DMF scores are a lifetime record of caries activity, whereas the 24-hour dietary recall records the latest dietary habits.
520 8 ‡aThe sample (n = 3,194) consisted of persons aged nine to 29 years who participated in the first National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES I) conducted by the National Center for Health Statistics from 1971 through 1974, and who were categorized by low or high DMFT scores. High DMFT scores were defined as those scores at or above the 80th percentile of the DMFT distribution, while low DMFT scores were those at or below the 20th percentile at each age. The dietary data were abstracted from
520 8 ‡astudy. The impact of non-consumption of foods associated with increased prevalence of dental caries was determined using the attributable risk analysis.
520 ‡aThe purpose of this epidemiologic study was to determine the probability (the "odds ratio") of high DMFT scores being associated with reported consumption of selected food groups. In addition to estimating the odds ratios, a logistic regression model was used to account for differences between those with low and high DMFT scores in age, gender, race, education, income, concentration of fluoride in the outer enamel surface, the F/DMFT ratio, and the consumption of sugary foods other than those under
538 ‡aMode of access: Internet.
650 4 ‡aHEALTH SCIENCES, DENTISTRY
899 ‡a39015025271605 ‡bBuhr C 466907 ‡c1984
CID ‡a002158981
DAT 0 ‡a20200916121624.0 ‡b20240704000000.0
DAT 1 ‡a20240704060829.0 ‡b2024-07-04T20:05:59Z
DAT 2 ‡a2022-11-22T18:30:02Z
CAT ‡aSDR-MIU ‡cmiu ‡dALMA ‡lprepare.pl-004-008
FMT ‡aBK
HOL ‡0sdr-miu.990021589810106381 ‡aMiU ‡bSDR ‡cMIU ‡f002158981 ‡pmdp.39015025271605 ‡sMIU ‡z1984 ‡1990021589810106381
974 ‡bMIU ‡cMIU ‡d20240704 ‡sgoogle ‡umdp.39015025271605 ‡z1984 ‡y1984 ‡ric ‡qbib ‡tUS bib date1 >= 1929
974 ‡bMIU ‡cMIU ‡d20240705 ‡sgoogle ‡umdp.39015008741004 ‡ztext ‡y1984 ‡ric ‡qbib ‡tUS bib date1 >= 1929