Article
Impact of rare diseases in oral health
Author/s | Molina García, Ana
Castellanos Cosano, Lizett Machuca-Portillo, Guillermo Posada de la Paz, Manuel |
Department | Universidad de Sevilla. Departamento de Estomatología Instituto de Biomedicina de Sevilla (IBIS) |
Publication Date | 2016 |
Deposit Date | 2024-09-10 |
Abstract | Background: Rare diseases (RD) are those that present a lower prevalence than 5 cases per 10.000 population. The
main objective of this review was to study the effect on oral health in rare diseases, while the secondary ... Background: Rare diseases (RD) are those that present a lower prevalence than 5 cases per 10.000 population. The main objective of this review was to study the effect on oral health in rare diseases, while the secondary objective of the study is theme upgrade. Material and Methods: Comparative observational case-control studies were analysed and a systematic review was conducted in PubMed. Each rare disease listed on the statistical data record of the Health Portal of the Ministry of Equality, Health and Social Policies Board of Andalusia was associated with “oral health”. The variables studied included dental, oral mucosa and occlusion alterations, oral pathologies (caries, periodontal disease) and other alterations (mouth breathing, parafunctional habits, etc). A bias analysis of the variable caries was conducted. Results: Six RD were selected through our inclusion and exclusion criteria (hypogammaglobulinemia, Rett syn drome, Marfan syndrome, Prader-Willi syndrome, cystic fibrosis and Cri du chat syndrome) in a total of 8 publi cations, of which four trials were classified as high risk of bias and one of them as medium risk. There were not trials with low risk of bias. Conclusions: The main statistically significant differences found by Syndrome compared to a control group were in Hypogammaglobulinemia with a greater tendency to enamel hypoplasia and dry mouth. The Rett syndrome had, as well, a greater tendency to an anterior open bite, ogival palate, bruxism, mouth breathing and tongue thrusting. Prader-Willi syndrome had a tendency of dental erosion, and Cri du chat syndrome showed a higher association to Tannerella forsythia. |
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