Java project on periodontal diseases: causes of tooth loss in a cohort of untreated individuals

Objective To assess the relative contribution of caries and periodontal disease to tooth loss over 24 years in a cohort deprived of regular dental care. Material & Methods The study population consisted of 98 subjects from a tea estate on West Java, Indonesia, that had been part of a prospective...

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Published inJournal of clinical periodontology Vol. 42; no. 9; pp. 824 - 831
Main Authors van der Velden, Ubele, Amaliya, Amaliya, Loos, Bruno G., Timmerman, Mark F., van der Weijden, Fridus A., Winkel, Edwin G., Abbas, Frank
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.09.2015
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Summary:Objective To assess the relative contribution of caries and periodontal disease to tooth loss over 24 years in a cohort deprived of regular dental care. Material & Methods The study population consisted of 98 subjects from a tea estate on West Java, Indonesia, that had been part of a prospective longitudinal study and provided full datasets of clinical assessments between 1987, 1994 and 2002. In 2011, complete sets of dental radiographs were made which was combined with the survey forms and clinical slides from the previous assessments in order to estimate reasons for tooth loss. Results Thirty‐seven subjects lost no teeth, whereas 61 subjects lost 185 teeth. In this group, 45.9% lost ≤2 teeth, 32.8% lost 3 to 4 teeth and 19.7% lost ≥5 teeth. The majority of teeth were lost due to caries. In five subjects, tooth loss could be attributed solely to periodontitis, whereas in four subjects teeth were lost due to both caries and periodontits. Analyses of the predictor variables age, gender, smoking, education, presence of caries and severe periodontitis showed that male gender and caries were significantly associated with tooth loss. Conclusion The majority of teeth in this population were lost due to caries.
Bibliography:ark:/67375/WNG-PDCKTJ4Q-P
ArticleID:JCPE12446
Nuffic - No. CF 7454/2011
Padjadjaran State University
istex:0B60C9B1850260CD47ABEB36B7E74C4B01698C41
Departments of Periodontology at ACTA
The authors declare no competing financial interests. This research has been supported in part by a grant of Nuffic (Netherlands Fellowship Programmes, CF 7454/2011) and was further self‐funded by Departments of Periodontology at ACTA and Padjadjaran State University and the authors FA and EGW.
Conflict of interest and source of funding statement
ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
ISSN:0303-6979
1600-051X
DOI:10.1111/jcpe.12446