Abstract

In a study of children with chronic disorders of calcium and phosphate homeostasis, enamel hypoplasia was found in hereditary vitamin D-dependency rickets and in hypoparathyroidism, conditions characterized by hypocalcemia, and was not found in X-linked hypophosphatemic rickets, a condition in which the plasma calcium concentration is normal. The occurrence of enamel hypoplasia bore no relation to the plasma phosphate concentration. Enamel hypoplasia has also been reported in other pediatric disorders in which hypocalcemia is a major sign (for example, vitamin D deficiency, prematurity, and neonatal tetany). The existence of enamel hypoplasia in a hypoparathyroid or rachitic patient, when correlated with the chronology of enamel mineralization, helps to establish the time of onset of hypocalcemia. The observations led us to the hypothesis that a low serum calcium concentration during enamel formation is a specific determinant of enamel hypoplasia. This hypothesis may be relevant to the etiology of linear enamel hypoplasia, an endemic lesion of primary teeth in children of many Third World countries that predisposes the teeth to dental caries. The hypothesis may therefore be relevant also in explaining the prevalence of caries in the primary teeth of children in many underdeveloped countries.

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