V. Baelum et al., PREDICTORS OF DESTRUCTIVE PERIODONTAL-DISEASE INCIDENCE AND PROGRESSION IN ADULT AND ELDERLY CHINESE, Community dentistry and oral epidemiology, 25(4), 1997, pp. 265-272
Citations number
41
Categorie Soggetti
Dentistry,Oral Surgery & Medicine","Public, Environmental & Occupation Heath
This study describes some predictors of new and progressing destructiv
e periodontal disease over a 10-year period in rural Chinese. A total
of 398 persons aged 20-80 years, who had participated in a baseline su
rvey of tooth mortality, dental caries and periodontal conditions and
were still dentate 10 years later, were reexamined for the same parame
ters as assessed at baseline. Three different threshold values were us
ed to define new and progressing destructive periodontal disease. Irre
spective of the threshold used, most persons experienced new disease.
Progressing disease was very prevalent when a 2+ mm disease definition
was used, but occurred less frequently at the higher threshold levels
. The logistic regression models for 2+ and 3+ mm disease were essenti
ally similar, and showed that women, persons with 104 sites or more, a
nd persons with 0-5% sites with 4+ mm attachment levels had a lower ri
sk of disease progression as well as of new disease than did men, pers
ons with few sites and persons with 6% sites or more with attachment l
evels 4+ mm, The variables sex, number of sites present, percentage of
sites with 4+ mm attachment levels, and presence of mobile teeth were
predictive for new disease using a 4+ mm definition. Age, percentage
of sites with 4+ mm attachment levels and percentage of sites with 4mm pockets were predictive for progressing disease using the 4+ mm dis
ease definition.