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Feasibility and development of a cariogenic diet scale for epidemiological research

journal contribution
posted on 2019-05-01, 00:00 authored by Emily Amezdroz, Lauren Carpenter, Shae Johnson, Victoria Flood, Stuart G Dashper, Hanny CalacheHanny Calache, Mark Gussy, Elizabeth Waters
BACKGROUND: Diet cariogenicity plays a major role as both a protective and risk factor in the development of early childhood caries (ECC). AIM: Develop a scale measuring the cariogenicity of foods and beverages and employ it to describe the cariogenicity of young children's diets and predict dental caries outcomes. DESIGN: Scores of cariogenicity and consumption frequency were applied to food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) collected from an Australian children's cohort study with three time-points of data. One-way ANOVA, with post hoc Tukey test compared mean cariogenic scale measured at 18 months between the subsample of children with caries classification at age 5 years. RESULTS: At 6 months, children's mean cariogenic score was 10.05, increasing to 34.18 at 12 and 50.00 at 18 months. Mean cariogenic scale score at 18 months was significantly higher in children with advanced disease at 5 years (mean scale score: 59.0 ± 15.9) compared to those that were healthy (mean score 47.7 ± 17.5, P = 0.007) or had mild-moderate disease (mean score 48.2 ± 17.3, P = 0.008). CONCLUSIONS: The cariogenic diet scale provides a useful indication of the increasing cariogenicity of children's diets with age and highlights the incorporation of discretionary choice foods and beverages into the diets of young children much earlier than nutritionally recommended.

History

Journal

International journal of paediatric dentistry

Volume

29

Issue

3

Pagination

310 - 324

Publisher

Wiley

Location

Chichester, Eng.

ISSN

0960-7439

eISSN

1365-263X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2019, BSPD, IAPD and John Wiley & Sons