Poliklinik für Kieferorthopädie, Präventive Zahnmedizin und Kinderzahnheilkunde
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Less invasive caries management techniques for treating cavitated carious primary teeth, which involve the concept of caries control by managing the activity of the biofilm, are becoming common. This study aimed to compare the clinical efficacy (minor/major failures) and survival rates (successful cases without any failures) of 3 carious lesion treatment approaches, the Hall Technique (HT), non-restorative caries treatment (NRCT), and conventional restorations (CR), for the management of occlusoproximal caries lesions (ICDAS 3-5) in primary molars. Results at 2.5 years are presented. A total of 169 children (3- to 8-year-olds) were enrolled in this secondary care-based, 3-arm parallel-group, randomised controlled trial. Participants were allocated to: HT (n = 52; sealing caries with stainless-steel crowns without caries removal), NRCT (n = 52; opening up the cavity and applying fluoride varnish), CR (n = 65; control arm, complete caries removal and compomer restoration). Statistical analyses were: non-parametric Kruskal-Wallis analysis of variance, Mann-Whitney U test and Kaplan-Meier survival analyses. One hundred and forty-two participants (84%; HT = 40/52; NRCT = 44/52; CR = 58/65) had follow-up data of 1-33 months (mean = 26). Overall, 25 (HT = 2, NRCT = 9, CR = 14) of 142 participants (17.6%) presented with at least 1 minor failure (reversible pulpitis, caries progression, or secondary caries; p = 0.013, CI = 0.012-0.018; Mann-Whitney U test). Ten (HT = 1, NRCT = 4, CR = 5) of 142 participants (7.04%) experienced at least 1 major failure (irreversible pulpitis, abscess, unrestorable tooth; p = 0.043, CI = 0.034-0.045). Independent comparisons between 2 samples found that NRCT-CR had no statistically significant difference in failures (p > 0.05), but for CR-HT (p = 0.037, CI = 0.030-0.040) and for NRCT-HT (p = 0.011, CI = 0.010-0.016; Kruskal-Wallis test) significant differences were observed. Cumulative survival rates were HT = 92.5%, NRCT = 70.5%, and CR = 67.2% (p = 0.012). NRCT and CR outcomes were comparable. HT performed better than NRCT and CR for all outcomes. This study was funded by the Paediatric Dentistry Department, Greifswald University, Germany (Trial registration No. NCT01797458).
Background: Early childhood caries remains an unsolved problem in children under three worldwide. Midwives are important health care persons around birth and can shape behavior. They possibly can play a positive role in preventing early childhood caries in young children. Objective: to assess how involved midwives are in early childhood caries prevention, what preventive measures they recommend and what knowledge they have about early childhood caries, as well as to study the potential differences between the various federal states or due to their work experience. Materials and Methods: An online survey targeted midwives in Germany regarding their knowledge about early childhood caries as well as the preventive measures they recommended. Participants were members of the German Association of Midwives (DHV). The survey invitation was published with the monthly newsletter and in the association journal of the DHV. Data was collected anonymously. Results: 191 midwives nationwide responded to the questionnaire. Most midwives were aware about ECC prevalence, consequences, causes and the teeth mainly affected. Midwives gave excellent recommendations regarding diet, oral hygiene and avoiding prolonged bottle feeding. However, only 40.8% of midwives recommended the first dental visit with the eruption of the first tooth. 71.7% recommended a fluoride tooth paste with the eruption of the first tooth. The rest advised a later use or non-fluoridated toothpaste. Regional differences were minimal. Conclusion: Midwives have good oral health knowledge, but there is some variability in recommendations on the first dental visit and the use of fluoride toothpaste which reflects an inconsistency of professional recommendations delivered by different health care institutions in Germany.