4.4 Article

High Sucrose Intake at 3 Years of Age Is Associated with Increased Salivary Counts of Mutans Streptococci and Lactobacilli, and with Increased Caries Rate from 3 to 16 Years of Age

Journal

CARIES RESEARCH
Volume 49, Issue 2, Pages 125-132

Publisher

KARGER
DOI: 10.1159/000369358

Keywords

Aciduric flora; Dental caries; Sugar; Children; Adolescents; Longitudinal

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Objective: We aimed to study the long-term associations between sucrose intake (SI), selected representatives of the cariogenic oral flora, and the dental health of children from 3 to 16 years of age. Methods: At 7 months of age 1,062 infants (540 intervention; 522 controls) were included in the prospective, randomised STRIP-project aimed at restricting the child's saturated fat and cholesterol intake to prevent atherosclerosis when they become adults. At 3 years of age, every fifth child was invited (n = 178) to an oral sub-study, and 148 (78 boys) children attended. A restudy was conducted on 135 children aged 6,127 aged 9,114 aged 12 and 88 aged 16. SI using 4-day food records, plate-cultured mutans streptococci (MS), salivary lactobacilli (LB) and yeasts using commercial kits (Orion Diagnostica, Espoo Finland), tooth-brushing frequency using fluoridated toothpaste and dental health expressed as d(3)mft/D3MFT were regularly recorded. Results:The SI of children whose intake was >= 1 0 E% (high SI) at 3 years remained high throughout the entire follow-up (p < 0.001, GLM for repeated measures) period, and they had higher salivary MS and LB counts (p = 0.024 and p = 0.068, respectively, GLM) than their counterparts whose SI was below 10 E% (low SI). No differences in toothbrushing habits were found between the high and low SI-groups. Caries-survival was strongly associated with low 6-year-counts of MS (p = 0.008, Cox regression analysis), and the d(3)mft/D3MFT scores of the high SI-group were higher than those of the low SI-group (p = 0.046, GLM). Conclusions: High SI at 3 years was associated with high MS-counts (>= 10(5) cfu/ml) and with a high risk for caries. (C) 2015 S. Karger AG, Basel

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