Exploring the association between body mass index and dental caries in 3–7-year-old children, living in Łódź, Poland

Author:

Bruzda-Zwiech Agnieszka1,Borowska-Strugińska Beata2,Filipińska Renata1,Żądzińska Elżbieta2,Lubowiedzka-Gontarek Beata3,Szydłowska-Walendowska Beata3,Wochna-Sobańska Magdalena3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Paediatric Dentistry, Medical University of Łódź, Poland

2. Department of Anthropology, Faculty of Biology and Environmental Protection, University of Łódź, Poland

3. Teaching Hospital No. 6, Department of Pedodontics, Dental Institute in Łódź, Poland

Abstract

Abstract Dental caries and childhood obesity are major problems affecting the health of children and preventing these conditions in children have been recognized as public health priorities (Hong et al. 2008; Odgien et al. 2010). The aim of the present study was to analyze the association between age-specific body mass index (BMI-for age) and dental caries in 3- to 7-year-olds. A cross-sectional study was conducted on 729 children from randomly chosen kindergartens and elementary schools in the urban area of Lodz, Poland. Anthropometric measurements were taken and the BMI-for-age was calculated for each child. Dental examinations were performed according to the WHO criteria. The sum of decayed, missing, filled primary/ permanent teeth and surfaces - dmft/DMFT and dmft/DMFTS, and caries prevalence were computed. The percentage distribution of the BMI categories in the study group was: 72.7% normal weight, 8.92% underweight, 12.89% overweight and 5.49% obese. Caries prevalence in the primary dentition was significantly lower in underweight children than in those who were of normal weight (p=0.004) or were overweight (p=0.039). However, controlling for age and gender, no significant association was noted between BMI and caries prevalence in either dentition group. The Kruskal-Wallis test failed to reveal any significant differences in mean dmft across the four BMI groups in the whole population, nor within particular age groups, nor in DMFT in 5- to 7-year-olds. There was no association between BMI and dental caries either in the primary dentition or permanent teeth in the early period after eruption.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Anthropology,Health (social science)

Reference41 articles.

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3. Cinar AB, Christensen LB, Hede B. 2011. Clustering of obesity and dental caries with lifestyle factors among Danish adolescents. Oral Health Prev Dent 9:123-30.

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