Caries Development from 11 to 22 Years of Age: A Prospective Radiographic StudyPrevalence and Distribution

I Mejàre; C Källestål; H Stenlund; H Johansson; (1998) Caries Development from 11 to 22 Years of Age: A Prospective Radiographic StudyPrevalence and Distribution. Caries research, 32 (1). pp. 10-16. ISSN 0008-6568 https://www.karger.com/DOI/10.1159/000016424
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The aim was to assess the distribution and pattern of caries development longitudinally in teenagers and adolescents whose treatment had been based on remineralizing rather than restorative strategies. A baseline cohort of 536 children was studied, using bite-wing radiographs, from 11 to 22 years of age. The results showed a slow but continuous increase in both enamel and dentin caries of approximal surfaces. At 21, 29% of all posterior approximal surfaces had enamel caries according to the radiographic diagnoses, 14% had dentin caries and another 5% were restored. At the age of 20–21, the skewed distribution of DMFS<sub>appr</sub> apparent at 12 and 15 had given way to a more uniform picture and the percentage of individuals with no decayed approximal surfaces (DMFS<sub>appr</sub> = 0) decreased from 71 at 12–13 to 28 at 20–21 years of age. The proportion of DFS<sub>occl</sub> in relation to all DFS decreased from 83% at 12 to 52% at 21. The occlusal, mesial and distal surfaces of the first molar accounted for 60% of all restored surfaces at 21.

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