Dental Caries Experience in Texan Children with Cleft Lip and Palate

Pediatr Dent. 2017 Sep 15;39(5):397-402.

Abstract

Purpose: The purpose of this study was to assess the caries experience in the primary dentition of children born with cleft lip and palate (CLP).

Methods: A retrospective chart review was conducted on subjects between two and six years old recruited from a university-based pediatric dentistry residency clinic. The number of dental visits and professional fluoride applications, the plaque index and treatment modality, and the presence/location of caries, white spot lesions, and enamel hypoplastic lesions were compared between CLP patients and healthy age- and gender-matched controls. Descriptive statistics, Student's t test, Mann-Whitney U test, and regression analysis were completed.

Results: A total of 183 charts were reviewed. Compared to healthy children, CLP children had increases in number of dental visits (P<0.001), decayed-missing-filled surfaces (dmfs; P<0.001), decayed-missing-filled teeth (dmft; P<0.001), enamel hypoplastic lesions (P=0.003), treatment completed under general anesthesia (P<0.001), plaque score (P<0.001), and caries increment between baseline and most recent oral examination (P=0.003). Regression analysis revealed a positive association between age and dmft scores within the CLP group (P=0.018). The caries experience of unilateral and bilateral CLP cases was the same (P>0.05).

Conclusions: Children with cleft lip and palate are at a greater risk of enamel hypoplasia and dental caries. No significant caries experience difference was found between unilateral or bilateral CLP cases.

MeSH terms

  • Case-Control Studies
  • Child
  • Child, Preschool
  • Cleft Lip / complications*
  • Cleft Palate / complications*
  • Dental Caries / complications*
  • Dental Caries / epidemiology*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Texas / epidemiology