UCSF Scientists May Have Found Link To Early Childhood Tooth Decay

A two-year-old Latina child's mouth was aching and
she was quietly crying herself to sleep. But the pain, disease and
enormous costs of treatment for her tooth decay were all preventable,
according to scientists at the University of California, San Francisco
School of Dentistry.
In a recent study published in The Journal of Clinical Pediatric
Dentistry, clinicians and researchers teamed together to study bacterial,
behavioral and environmental factors associated with Early Childhood
Caries (ECC or baby bottle tooth decay).
They found that ECC is a preventable condition characterized by
decay of primary (baby) teeth which may begin as an infant's teeth
erupt, long before her first year.
What is also significant is that the two-year-old was probably infected
by her own mother's mouth bacteria due to lack of dental health
care in underserved and poor communities, the study found.
ECC is five times more common than asthma and seven times more common
than hay fever, but researchers are just beginning to understand
its complexity.
In the UCSF study, researchers assessed salivary
levels of the bacteria mutans streptococci (MS) and lactobacilli
(LB) in underserved, predominantly Hispanic children. One hundred
forty-six infants and toddlers aged three to 55 months with dental
decay were identified and examined. The study demonstrated significant
association between relatively low cariogenic bacterial levels and
dental caries in infants and toddlers. The same bacteria strain
(MS or LB) of the mother or caretaker was found in the infants and
toddlers. The study also showed that ECC correlates significantly
with the child's age and lack of dental insurance of the children
and that ECC also correlates with both low family income and the
less education of the mother of the child.
Francisco Ramos-Gomez, DDS, MSc, MPH, UCSF associate
professor of pediatric dentistry in the department of growth and
development and director of the Pediatric Dental Services at San
Francisco General Hospital Medical Center, is lead author of the
study. This population needs help from all of us; from policy makers,
health care providers and from those serving the children, Ramos-Gomez
said. The cost of a full mouth rehabilitation under general anesthesia
of a two year old is about $10,000. If we can make an impact on
the population by teaching them directly how to care for their infants
before the damage is done, we can save the children from the pain
and society from the costs of repairing the decay.
Most people don't realize the importance of baby
teeth, Ramos-Gomez said. They affect the oral health of an adult
by:
* Guiding permanent teeth and preventing decay and
malocclusions
* Chewing food, which could affect adults through
eating disorders and gastrointestinal problems
* Speech development patterns
* Passing bacteria to permanent teeth
Oral health also affects the children when they
are sleeping, during daily play and learning as well as having self-esteem.
Study subjects were recruited from three sites based
at the SFGH Medical Center (the Family Dental Center; the Women,
Infant and Children Program (WIC), and the Well Child Clinic). All
of these sites serve primarily low-income Hispanic and African-American
families.
The population studied included the following demographics:
* All of the children were from San Francisco
* 45 percent were female; 55 percent were male
* The median age was 30 months (range from 3 months
to 55 months)
* 137 were of Hispanic origin (Mexican, Mexican-American,
Central American or from Puerto Rico)
* Two were African American and four were non-Hispanic whites
* 15 percent of the children were from single-parent
families
* 95 percent of caregivers were mothers; 4 percent
were fathers and 1 percent were other relatives
* Median age of the mothers was 27 years Median
age of the fathers was 28 years 73 percent of parents had less than
a high school education
* 71 percent of families earned less than $15,000
annually
The majority of parents (55 percent) had not seen
a dentist in the previous two years, but 79 percent reported they
currently had tooth decay.
Dental caries in preschool children remain a significant
health problem in the United States. The prevalence of caries is
especially high among low-income children, particularly Native Americans,
Mexican-Americans and African Americans.
There was a statistically significant correlation
between ECC and lack of dental insurance of the children, Ramos-Gomez
said. Children without dental insurance were more than twice as
likely to have EDCC as children with dental insurance.
The most striking finding of our study was the low
levels of MS bacteria associated with ECC in very young children,
Ramos-Gomez said. This finding may put these infants and toddlers
at higher risk than previously thought. In these young children,
threshold levels of both bacteria associated with caries were lower
than in older children and adults, meaning that infants and toddlers
are more at risk.
Efforts to reduce ECC should include improving dental
education and access to dental care for adult caregivers. The UCSF
research suggests that these two factors could significantly reduce
transmission of MS from adult to child.
Our study has been validated recently by two papers
which confirmed that babys mouths can be colonized with cariogenic
(decay causing) bacteria before their teeth emerge, John D.B. Featherstone,
PhD, said. Featherstone, UCSF professor and chair of the department
of preventive and restorative dental sciences, added that the UCSF
study found that the levels of bacteria for infants that cause the
beginnings of decay are very low compared to older children and
adults. Unfortunately, he said, the lack of oral health of the mother
or caregiver seems to perpetuate itself with these youngsters.
Co-authors
of the study include Jane A. Weintraub, DDS, MPH and Stuart A. Gansky,
DDS, both UCSF professors of preventative and restorative dental
sciences; Charles I. Hoover, PhD, UCSF assistant professor of stomatology;
and John D.B. Featherstone, PhD, UCSF professor and chair, preventive
and restorative dental sciences. This study was funded by a grant
from the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
This
story has been adapted from a news release issued by University
Of California - San Francisco
|