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Obesity and Dental Decay: Inference on the Role of Dietary Sugar

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the relationship of children’s obesity and dental decay. METHODS: We measured parameters related to obesity and dental decay in 8,275 4(th) and 5(th) grade Kuwaiti children (average age = 11.36 years) in a cross-sectional study. First to determine body weight, height, age for...

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Autores principales: Goodson, J. Max, Tavares, Mary, Wang, Xiaoshan, Niederman, Richard, Cugini, Maryann, Hasturk, Hatice, Barake, Roula, Alsmadi, Osama, Al-Mutawa, Sabiha, Ariga, Jitendra, Soparkar, Pramod, Behbehani, Jawad, Behbehani, Kazem
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3795155/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24130667
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0074461
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author Goodson, J. Max
Tavares, Mary
Wang, Xiaoshan
Niederman, Richard
Cugini, Maryann
Hasturk, Hatice
Barake, Roula
Alsmadi, Osama
Al-Mutawa, Sabiha
Ariga, Jitendra
Soparkar, Pramod
Behbehani, Jawad
Behbehani, Kazem
author_facet Goodson, J. Max
Tavares, Mary
Wang, Xiaoshan
Niederman, Richard
Cugini, Maryann
Hasturk, Hatice
Barake, Roula
Alsmadi, Osama
Al-Mutawa, Sabiha
Ariga, Jitendra
Soparkar, Pramod
Behbehani, Jawad
Behbehani, Kazem
author_sort Goodson, J. Max
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the relationship of children’s obesity and dental decay. METHODS: We measured parameters related to obesity and dental decay in 8,275 4(th) and 5(th) grade Kuwaiti children (average age = 11.36 years) in a cross-sectional study. First to determine body weight, height, age for computation of BMI . Second, to determine numbers of teeth, numbers of fillings and numbers of untreated decayed teeth to determine extent and severity of dental disease. From these measurements, we computed measures of dental decay in children from four body weight categories; obese, overweight, normal healthy weight and underweight children. RESULTS: The percentage of children with decayed or filled teeth varied inversely with the body weight category. The percentage of decayed or filled teeth decreased from 15.61% (n=193) in underweight children, to 13.03% (n=4,094) in normal healthy weight children, to 9.73% (n=1,786) in overweight children to 7.87% (n=2,202) in obese children. Differences between all groups were statistically significant. Male children in this population had more dental decay than female children but the reduction of tooth decay as a function of BMI was greater in male children. CONCLUSIONS: The finding of an inverse obesity-dental decay relationship contradicts the obesity-sugar and the obesity-dental decay relationship hypotheses. Sugar is well recognized as necessary and sufficient for dental decay. Sugar is also hypothesized to be a leading co-factor in obesity. If the later hypothesis is true, one would expect dental decay to increase with obesity. This was not found. The reasons for this inverse relationship are not currently clear.
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spelling pubmed-37951552013-10-15 Obesity and Dental Decay: Inference on the Role of Dietary Sugar Goodson, J. Max Tavares, Mary Wang, Xiaoshan Niederman, Richard Cugini, Maryann Hasturk, Hatice Barake, Roula Alsmadi, Osama Al-Mutawa, Sabiha Ariga, Jitendra Soparkar, Pramod Behbehani, Jawad Behbehani, Kazem PLoS One Research Article OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the relationship of children’s obesity and dental decay. METHODS: We measured parameters related to obesity and dental decay in 8,275 4(th) and 5(th) grade Kuwaiti children (average age = 11.36 years) in a cross-sectional study. First to determine body weight, height, age for computation of BMI . Second, to determine numbers of teeth, numbers of fillings and numbers of untreated decayed teeth to determine extent and severity of dental disease. From these measurements, we computed measures of dental decay in children from four body weight categories; obese, overweight, normal healthy weight and underweight children. RESULTS: The percentage of children with decayed or filled teeth varied inversely with the body weight category. The percentage of decayed or filled teeth decreased from 15.61% (n=193) in underweight children, to 13.03% (n=4,094) in normal healthy weight children, to 9.73% (n=1,786) in overweight children to 7.87% (n=2,202) in obese children. Differences between all groups were statistically significant. Male children in this population had more dental decay than female children but the reduction of tooth decay as a function of BMI was greater in male children. CONCLUSIONS: The finding of an inverse obesity-dental decay relationship contradicts the obesity-sugar and the obesity-dental decay relationship hypotheses. Sugar is well recognized as necessary and sufficient for dental decay. Sugar is also hypothesized to be a leading co-factor in obesity. If the later hypothesis is true, one would expect dental decay to increase with obesity. This was not found. The reasons for this inverse relationship are not currently clear. Public Library of Science 2013-10-10 /pmc/articles/PMC3795155/ /pubmed/24130667 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0074461 Text en © 2013 Goodson et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Goodson, J. Max
Tavares, Mary
Wang, Xiaoshan
Niederman, Richard
Cugini, Maryann
Hasturk, Hatice
Barake, Roula
Alsmadi, Osama
Al-Mutawa, Sabiha
Ariga, Jitendra
Soparkar, Pramod
Behbehani, Jawad
Behbehani, Kazem
Obesity and Dental Decay: Inference on the Role of Dietary Sugar
title Obesity and Dental Decay: Inference on the Role of Dietary Sugar
title_full Obesity and Dental Decay: Inference on the Role of Dietary Sugar
title_fullStr Obesity and Dental Decay: Inference on the Role of Dietary Sugar
title_full_unstemmed Obesity and Dental Decay: Inference on the Role of Dietary Sugar
title_short Obesity and Dental Decay: Inference on the Role of Dietary Sugar
title_sort obesity and dental decay: inference on the role of dietary sugar
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3795155/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24130667
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0074461
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