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Blood lead level and dental caries in school-age children.

The association between blood lead level and dental caries was evaluated in cross-sectional analyses of baseline data for 543 children 6-10 years old screened for enrollment in the Children's Amalgam Trial, a study designed to assess potential health effects of mercury in silver fillings. Appro...

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Autores principales: Gemmel, Allison, Tavares, Mary, Alperin, Susan, Soncini, Jennifer, Daniel, David, Dunn, Julie, Crawford, Sybil, Braveman, Norman, Clarkson, Thomas W, McKinlay, Sonja, Bellinger, David C
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2002
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1241049/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12361944
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author Gemmel, Allison
Tavares, Mary
Alperin, Susan
Soncini, Jennifer
Daniel, David
Dunn, Julie
Crawford, Sybil
Braveman, Norman
Clarkson, Thomas W
McKinlay, Sonja
Bellinger, David C
author_facet Gemmel, Allison
Tavares, Mary
Alperin, Susan
Soncini, Jennifer
Daniel, David
Dunn, Julie
Crawford, Sybil
Braveman, Norman
Clarkson, Thomas W
McKinlay, Sonja
Bellinger, David C
author_sort Gemmel, Allison
collection PubMed
description The association between blood lead level and dental caries was evaluated in cross-sectional analyses of baseline data for 543 children 6-10 years old screened for enrollment in the Children's Amalgam Trial, a study designed to assess potential health effects of mercury in silver fillings. Approximately half of the children were recruited from an urban setting (Boston/Cambridge, MA, USA) and approximately half from a rural setting (Farmington, ME, USA). Mean blood lead level was significantly greater among the urban subgroup, as was the mean number of carious tooth surfaces. Blood lead level was positively associated with number of caries among urban children, even with adjustment for demographic and maternal factors and child dental practices. This association was stronger in primary than in permanent dentition and stronger for occlusal, lingual, and buccal tooth surfaces than for mesial or distal surfaces. In general, blood lead was not associated with caries in the rural subgroup. The difference between the strength of the associations in the urban and rural settings might reflect the presence of residual confounding in the former setting, the presence of greater variability in the latter setting in terms of important caries risk factors (e.g., fluoride exposure), or greater exposure misclassification in the rural setting. These findings add to the evidence supporting a weak association between children's lead exposure and caries prevalence. A biologic mechanism for lead cariogenicity has not been identified, however. Our data are also consistent with residual confounding by factors associated with both elevated lead exposure and dental caries.
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spelling pubmed-12410492005-11-08 Blood lead level and dental caries in school-age children. Gemmel, Allison Tavares, Mary Alperin, Susan Soncini, Jennifer Daniel, David Dunn, Julie Crawford, Sybil Braveman, Norman Clarkson, Thomas W McKinlay, Sonja Bellinger, David C Environ Health Perspect Research Article The association between blood lead level and dental caries was evaluated in cross-sectional analyses of baseline data for 543 children 6-10 years old screened for enrollment in the Children's Amalgam Trial, a study designed to assess potential health effects of mercury in silver fillings. Approximately half of the children were recruited from an urban setting (Boston/Cambridge, MA, USA) and approximately half from a rural setting (Farmington, ME, USA). Mean blood lead level was significantly greater among the urban subgroup, as was the mean number of carious tooth surfaces. Blood lead level was positively associated with number of caries among urban children, even with adjustment for demographic and maternal factors and child dental practices. This association was stronger in primary than in permanent dentition and stronger for occlusal, lingual, and buccal tooth surfaces than for mesial or distal surfaces. In general, blood lead was not associated with caries in the rural subgroup. The difference between the strength of the associations in the urban and rural settings might reflect the presence of residual confounding in the former setting, the presence of greater variability in the latter setting in terms of important caries risk factors (e.g., fluoride exposure), or greater exposure misclassification in the rural setting. These findings add to the evidence supporting a weak association between children's lead exposure and caries prevalence. A biologic mechanism for lead cariogenicity has not been identified, however. Our data are also consistent with residual confounding by factors associated with both elevated lead exposure and dental caries. 2002-10 /pmc/articles/PMC1241049/ /pubmed/12361944 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Gemmel, Allison
Tavares, Mary
Alperin, Susan
Soncini, Jennifer
Daniel, David
Dunn, Julie
Crawford, Sybil
Braveman, Norman
Clarkson, Thomas W
McKinlay, Sonja
Bellinger, David C
Blood lead level and dental caries in school-age children.
title Blood lead level and dental caries in school-age children.
title_full Blood lead level and dental caries in school-age children.
title_fullStr Blood lead level and dental caries in school-age children.
title_full_unstemmed Blood lead level and dental caries in school-age children.
title_short Blood lead level and dental caries in school-age children.
title_sort blood lead level and dental caries in school-age children.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1241049/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12361944
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