Abstract

The present cohort study examined how lifestyle, household environment, and caries activity test score of Japanese children at age 1.5 years affected their dental caries incidence at age 3. Inclusion criteria were 1.5-year-old children with no dental caries. Dental examinations were performed for 33,655 children who participated in routine dental examinations at 1.5 years of age, and the exam was repeated approximately 21 months later (at age 3) at the Kobe City Public Health Center in Japan. After excluding 622 children who had caries at age 1.5 and 1831 children with missing lifestyle and household environment data in the questionnaires, the final data analysis was performed on a total of 31,202 children (16,052 boys, 15,150 girls).The multivariate logistic regression analysis indicated a strong association of the consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages/snacks, less frequent tooth brushing by the parents, lack of fluoride varnish, family history of smoking, with the risk of developing dental caries. A child’s late bedtime is also one of the major risk factors for dental caries development. Further investigation is needed to examine whether the short duration or the irregularity of the sleep-wake cycle would affect early childhood oral health and whether there is a relationship between late bedtime and late night snack intake.

Highlights

  • Dental caries is a multifactorial-induced infectious disease

  • After controlling for nationality, birth order, and Cariostat score, we found that breast-fed children had an approximately 2-fold increased risk of dental caries in both boys and girls (Table 3)

  • The present results indicate that the application of fluoride varnish at 1.5 years old is an independent variable for decreasing the risk of caries development at 3 years old (Table 3)

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Summary

Introduction

Dental caries is a major oral health problem in children [1]. According to the results of the annual National Survey on Oral Health, in the 22-year period between 1989 and 2012, the prevalence of dental caries in children aged 3 years markedly decreased from 55.8% to 19.1%. In comparison to the children at age 18 months, the prevalence of dental caries increased almost ten times when the children turned 3 years old [17]. To understand why there is a large difference in dental caries between children at 18 months and 3 years old is an important public health issue. The children were followed up approximately 21 months in order to understand the association of lifestyle and household environment with early childhood dental caries

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