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PREVENTION I

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Examples: pulpal therapy, periodontal surgery, extractions, fixed prosthodontics, space maintainers. Prevent: loss of teeth, disseminated infection, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PREVENTION I


1
PREVENTION I
  • The Preventive Philosophy

2
PREVENTION. . . The Concept
  • The emergence of a new philosophy of dentistry
    based on prevention rather than repair and
    replacement has been the most significant
    development in the history of dentistry.
  • In a World Health Organization (WHO) study, it
    was found that countries with dental care systems
    that emphasized restorative care had the highest
    caries experience in the world, as measured by
    the number of decayed, missing and/or filled
    teeth, (DMFT).
  • These countries also had the highest number of
    completely edentulous individuals.
  • In countries where prevention was emphasized, the
    number of DMF teeth was substantially smaller.

3
PREVENTION . . .The Concept
  • The following data bear testimony to the futility
    of a mechanistic approach to gain and maintaining
    oral health for Americans
  • 98 of 40-44 year olds have had tooth decay, with
    an average 45 affected tooth surfaces.
  • the average American has between 9-10 missing
    permanent teeth
  • over 4 of the American population (between 10-12
    million individuals) is completely edentulous
    30 of Americans over 65 have no teeth at all.
  • 44 of Americans have gingivitis and
  • 13 of Americans have periodontal disease.

4
PREVENTION . . . The Concept
  • The resolution of such extensive problems of
    dental caries and periodontal disease by a
    restorative philosophy yields low efficiency
    and efficacy. It is not a cost/benefit effective
    way to achieve oral health.
  • As a consequence, the far-sighted in the
    profession have turned to prevention as the only
    feasible solution to a problem of such severity.
  • Oral health care systems which emphasize
    prevention will yield populations with good oral
    health those that do not, will not.

5
PREVENTION . . . The Concept
  • A philosophy of prevention is basic to a good
    contemporary practice.
  • Dentistry exists to facilitate the gaining of
    oral health by society.
  • Individual dentists profess to exist to help
    their patients gain oral health.
  • The preventive concept should be the thread that
    is woven through the entire fabric of dental
    practice.
  • The concept of prevention can be understood to
    apply to all aspects of practice by understanding
    prevention to exist at primary, secondary, and
    tertiary levels.

6
LEVELS OF PREVENTION
  • PRIMARY PREVENTION
  • Occurs in the clinically pre-pathologic period.
  • Involves promotion of oral health concepts, as
    well as specific protection.
  • Examples oral health education, water
    fluoridation, plaque removal through brushing and
    flossing, antimicrobials, topical fluorides, pit
    and fissure sealants, mouth guards.
  • Prevent caries, gingivitis, trauma to the teeth
    from occurring.

7
LEVELS OF PREVENTION
  • SECONDARY PREVENTION
  • Occurs in the early period of pathogenesis.
  • Involves early recognition and prompt therapy.
  • Examples Radiographic examination, Root scaling,
    conservative restorative treatment
  • Prevent further deterioration of health that
    would result in extensive lesions of the teeth,
    pulpal involvement, or periodontitis.

8
LEVEL OF PREVENTION
  • TERTIARY PREVENTION
  • Occurs later in the period of pathogenesis.
  • Involves limitation of disability and
    rehabilitation.
  • Examples pulpal therapy, periodontal surgery,
    extractions, fixed prosthodontics, space
    maintainers.
  • Prevent loss of teeth, disseminated infection,
    loss of space, occlusal disharmonies, and other
    significant oral disabilities.

9
CHILDREN IN THE CONCEPTHe who is wise
begins with the child.Goethe
  • As primary prevention is the ultimate goal of the
    dental profession, it necessarily follows that
    the thrust of any comprehensive oral health
    program be directed at the child.
  • Children must be the foundation of a practice
    that is focused on prevention.

10
UNDERSTANDING THE PROBLEM
  • To understand the problem of prevention as it
    relates to children, an understanding of the
    profile of oral disease experience of children
    (in America) is necessary.
  • Epidemiology is that branch of medicine that
    deals with the study of the causes, distribution,
    and control of disease in populations.
  • The epidemiological term for the magnitude of a
    disease existing in a population at a point in
    time is referred to as prevalence.
  • Prevalence must be differentiated from a related
    term, incidence.
  • Incidence is the disease occurring in a
    population during a specific period of time.
  • To say that the average 17 year old has 4.96
    decayed, missing or filled teeth is to make a
    statement of prevalence.
  • To say that the average child will develop a new
    carious lesion between ages of 6 and 10 is to
    make a statement of incidence.

11
PREVALENCE OF DENTAL CARIES IN CHILDREN
  • Two epidemiological measures will serve as
    indices of prevalence of caries
  • DMFT An index that represents the number of
    decayed (D), missing (M), and filled (F) teeth
    (T). Index is total of these three assessments in
    the individual.
  • DMFS An index that represents the number of
    decayed, missing, and filled surfaces (S), in the
    individual.
  • DMFS is the more sensitive measure of the
    magnitude of disease in the oral cavity.

12
PREVALENCE OF DENTAL CARIES IN CHILDREN
  • The average DMFT in school age children (age
    5-17) is 1.97.
  • The average DMFS is school age children (age
    5-17) is 3.07.
  • Over 50 of 5-9 year old children have at least
    one carious lesion or restoration.
  • At age 17, the average child has 4.96 DMFT, (1.0
    due to a missing tooth) and 8.04 DMFS 80 of
    adolescents have dental caries by age 17.
  • Obviously, the teeth are more vulnerable to decay
    the longer they are in the oral cavity.

13
PREVALENCE OF DENTAL CARIES IN CHILDREN
  • Only 20 of children have had no carious
    experience by age 17.
  • 80 of the dental carious experience occurs in
    25 of the children in this country. This
    concentration of disease has become greater
    through time. In 1980, approximately 65 of the
    caries was found in 24 of the children.
  • The prevalence of caries experience among
    children has declined significantly since 1970.
  • Approximately 80 of the carious lesions
    occurring in school age children are on the
    occlusal surface.

14
PREVALENCE OF DENTAL CARIES IN CHILDREN
  • The highest DMFT is found in the Northeastern
    United States the lowest in the Western United
    States.
  • African-American children have a lower DMFT than
    Euro-American children.
  • However, the profile of the DMFT is different.
    African-Americans have a higher percentage of the
    index in the decayed and missing category.
    Euro-Americans have a higher percentage of the
    index in the filled category.
  • This difference reflects the differential in
    professional oral health care accessed by these
    two groups.
  • Studies have confirmed that the percentage of
    decayed teeth in the index declines with
    increasing household income.

15
RELATED INFORMATION
  • Dental caries is the single most common chronic
    childhood disease, 5 times more common than
    asthma, and 7 times more common than hay fever.
  • There are striking disparities in caries
    prevalence by income. Poor children suffer twice
    as much caries as non-poor, and their disease is
    more likely to be untreated. (One out four
    children in America are born into
    poverty--17,000 for a family of four.)
  • Twenty-five percent of poor children have not
    seen a dentist prior to kindergarten.
  • 51 million school hours are lost each year to
    dental-related illness.
  • Toothaches are the most common classroom health
    problem.
  • Over one-third of American children do not have
    the benefit of water fluoridation our most
    effective

16
EARLY CHILDHOOD CARIES (NURSING CARIES)
  • 5-10 children have Early Childhood Caries (ECC),
    sometimes called nursing (or bottle) caries the
    rate is even higher among families with low
    incomes, and among racial/ethnic minorities.
  • ECC is the result of poor nursing/feeding habits
    associated with children being given the bottle
    past 12 month, and/or given the bottle with
    cariogenic solutions in it at night, and allowed
    to keep it in the mouth for a prolonged period.
  • ECC significantly increases a childs risk of
    future caries experience.

17
RISK FACTORS FOR CARIES AMONG CHILDREN
  • Children born to mothers in their teens have a 5X
    greater chance of having carious lesions by age
    5.
  • Living in a rural area doubles the likelihood of
    having caries.
  • Mothers who do not brush their teeth regularly,
    have children with double the risk for caries.

18
PREVALENCE OF PERIODONTAL DISEASE IN CHILDREN
  • Approximately 60 of school age children will
    have at least one site of gingival bleeding on
    probing.
  • 8 of children will have bleeding at multiple
    probing sites.
  • Less than 1 of children, 5-17, will have a loss
    of periodontal attachment.
  • One-third of teen-age children will have some
    supragingival calculus.
  • Ninety-eight percent (98) of school age
    children, ages 5-17, have normal periodontal
    tissues.

19
PREVALANCE OF MALOCCLUSION IN CHILDREN
  • Reliable epidemiological indices to assess
    malocclusions do not exist.
  • Data from one study indicate that approximately
    40 of children have occlusions close enough to
    ideal to be considered normal 60 do not.
  • However, one study found that 75 of school age
    children, age 6-11, were judged to have some
    degree of occlusal disharmony 37 were judged to
    have a handicapping malocclusion.
  • Another study found that only 14 of the age
    group present a handicapping malocclusion while
    an additional 38 could benefit from treatment
    meaning 50 of children could benefit.

20
PREVALANCE OF MALOCCLUSION IN CHILDREN
21
PREVALANCE OF MALOCCLUSION IN CHILDREN
  • Rarely are malocclusions seen in the primary
    dentition, though pre-dispositions to such can be
    identified.
  • Rather, malocclusions tend to emerge with the
    eruption of the permanent dentition and the
    growth spurts that occur during the school-age
    years.
  • The most common malocclusion identified in the
    primary dentition is the posterior crossbite. One
    study found it to exist in approximately 8 of
    primary dentitions.

22
OTHER PREVENTIVE ISSUES OF ORAL HEALTH
  • Cleft lip/palate, one of the most common birth
    defects, effects 1 in 600 life births in
    Euro-Americans and 1 in 1,850 live births in
    African-Americans.
  • Trauma to the cranio-facial complex are
    relatively common in children--studies are highly
    variable, 4-24.
  • Tobacco-related oral lesions are prevalent among
    adolescents who use smokeless (spit) tobacco.

23
PREVENTIVE FOCUS IN THIS UNIT
  • In this unit we will focus primarily and
    specifically on the preventive issues associated
    with caries and periodontal disease.
  • Prevention associated with malocclusions, trauma,
    and oral cancer will be addressed when these
    issues are addressed.
  • Our approach to prevention of caries and
    periodontal disease diseases will be
    multi-dimension and comprehensive.

24
IMPLEMENTING THE CONCEPT OF PREVENTION
  • Prevention of dental caries and periodontal
    disease is possible by directing our efforts to
    the four variables that are involved the teeth,
    the bacteria, the substrate, and the
    understanding and motivation of the child and
    parent.
  • It is imperative that the problem of prevention
    be approached by addressing all the variables of
    the disease process not just one or some.
  • The focusing on only one aspect of a multifaceted
    problem leads to a distorted understanding of the
    problem, and an inadequate result.

25
THE BLIND MEN AND THE ELEPHANTBY GEOFFREY SAXE
  • It was Six men of Indostan
  • To learning much inclined,
  • Who went to see the Elephant
  • (Though all of them were blind),
  • That each by observation
  • Might satisfy his mind.
  • The First approached the Elephant,
  • And happening to fall
  • Against his broad and sturdy side,
  • At once began to bawl
  • "Bless me! but the Elephant
  • Is very like a wall!"

26
The Second, feeling of the tusk, Cried, "Ho! What
have we here, So very round and smooth and
sharp? To me tis mighty clear, This wonder of an
Elephant Is very like a spearl" The Third
approached the animal, And happening to take The
squirming trunk within his hands Thus boldly up
and spake "I see", quoth he, "the Elephant Is
very like a snake! The Fourth reached out his
eager hand, And felt about the knee, "What most
this wondrous beast is like Is might plain",
quoth he "'Tis clear enough the Elephant Is very
like a tree!"
27
The Fifth, who chanced to touch the ear Said,
"E'en the blindest man Can tell what this
resembles most Deny the fact who can, This
marvel of an Elephant Is very like a fan!" The
Sixth no sooner had begun About the beast to
grope, Than, seizing on the swinging tail That
feel within his scope, "I see," quoth he, "the
Elephant Is very like a rope!" And so these men
of Indostan Disputed loud and long, Each in his
own opinion Exceeding stiff and strong, Though
each was partly in the right, And all were in the
wrong!
28
PREVENTIVE MEASURES DIRECTED TO THE TEETH
  • Water Fluoridation
  • High Potency Topical Fluorides
  • Fluoride Dentifrices
  • Fissure Sealants

29
PREVENTIVE MEASURES DIRECTED TO THE MICROFLORA
  • Plaque Removal
  • Antimicrobials

30
PREVENTIVE MEASURES DIRECTED TO THE SUBSTRATE
  • Dietary Analysis and Counseling

31
PREVENTIVE MEASURES DIRECTED TO THE EDUCATING
CHILDREN AND PATIENTS
  • Educational Techniques
  • Educational Resources
  • Audio-Visual Materials
  • Patient Educational Brochures
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