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Originalartikel | erschienen - Druck | peer reviewed | Open Access

Ten-year trends in DMF-S and DMF-T in a northeast German adult population Schmoeckel J, Haq J, Samietz S, Santamaría RM, Mourad MS, Völzke H, Kocher T, Splieth CH, Holtfreter B.


JOURNAL OF DENTISTRY 2021 ; 111(103727):


Bibliometrische Indikatoren



Impact Factor = 4,991

Zitierhäufigkeit nach WOS = 4

DOI = 10.1016/j.jdent.2021.103727

PubMed-ID = 34119612




Abstract

Objective: The aim of this study was to assess 10-year trends in coronal caries in adults aged 20-83 years using data from the two-representative population-based Studies of Health in Pomerania (SHIP-0/SHIP-Trend-0). Methods: Repeated cross-sectional data from 4,286 SHIP-0 and 3,913 SHIP-Trend-0 participants were analysed. Carious, filled and missing teeth/surfaces were recorded in a half-mouth design and the DMF-T/S scores and sound surfaces/teeth were calculated according to WHO criteria. Trends in DMF-T/S scores and its single components were presented stratified by age group and sex. Results: A statistically significant decline in coronal caries experience (DMF-T and DMF-S) in adults aged 20 to 83 years as well as for D-T/S components was observed. The proportion of edentulous participants was almost halved from 8.7% (SHIP-0) to 5.1% (SHIP-Trend-0), while the number of M-T declined from 4.4 to 3.5 revealing an overall clear shift to a higher retention rate of teeth. In younger adults (25-34 years) 3.8 more sound teeth (17.2 sound surfaces) were found in average in the mouth and in elderly (65-74 years) a clear shift from extracted to filled teeth was observed (M-T reduced by 5.4, while F-T increased by 4). Regarding sex differences, females had consistently on average higher MF-T/S values, but lower D-T/S values than males. Conclusion: A clinically relevant drop in the severity of coronal caries experience in all adult age groups in Northeast Germany shows that not only reductions in caries experience in adolescence translated into adulthood but also later improvements led to long-term oral health.

Veröffentlicht in

JOURNAL OF DENTISTRY


Jahr 2021
Impact Factor (2021) 4,991
Volume 111
Issue 103727
Seiten -
Open Access ja
Peer reviewed ja
Artikelart Originalartikel
Artikelstatus erschienen - Druck
DOI 10.1016/j.jdent.2021.103727
PubMed-ID 34119612

Allgemeine Daten zur Fachzeitschrift

Kurzbezeichnung: J DENT
ISSN: 0300-5712
eISSN: 1879-176X
Land: ENGLAND
Sprache: English
Kategorie(n):
  • DENTISTRY, ORAL SURGERY & MEDICINE


Impact Factor Entwicklung

Jahr Impact Factor
2008 2,033
2009 2
2010 2,115
2011 2,947
2012 3,2
2013 2,84
2014 2,749
2015 3,109
2016 3,456
2017 3,77
2018 3,28
2019 3,242
2020 4,379
2021 4,991
2022 4,4

Beteiligte Departments

Community Medicine
Zahnheilkunde

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