Frequency of food intakes and dental caries in a Malaysian dental student group

Objective: Although the relationship between snack food eating and dental caries has been investigated in the United States and European groups, no data exist for Asian snack foods and diets. Our objective was to investigate snack food eating and dental caries in a Malaysian dental student group. Me...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sulinda, D., Marina, M.M., Rahim, Z.H.A., Ferguson, D.B.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/3754/1/Frequency_of_food_intakes_and_dental_caries_in_a_Malaysian_dental_student_group.pdf
http://eprints.um.edu.my/3754/
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Universiti Malaya
Language: English
id my.um.eprints.3754
record_format eprints
spelling my.um.eprints.37542012-10-10T02:52:18Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/3754/ Frequency of food intakes and dental caries in a Malaysian dental student group Sulinda, D. Marina, M.M. Rahim, Z.H.A. Ferguson, D.B. RK Dentistry Objective: Although the relationship between snack food eating and dental caries has been investigated in the United States and European groups, no data exist for Asian snack foods and diets. Our objective was to investigate snack food eating and dental caries in a Malaysian dental student group. Methodology: Frequency of eating was assessed on a basis of 2 weekday and 2 weekend day diaries for non-fasting students and one weekday and one weekend day during Ramadan, and a similar set outside Ramadan for fasting students. The sucrose and carbohydrate composition of between meal snacks and drinks was identified. The total number of decayed, missing, and filled teeth was recorded by two dental examiners. Results: The modal number of total food intakes was 2 or 3 per day on both weekdays and weekends. The number of between-meal snacks and drinks varied between 0 and 5. They were either high sucrose/low carbohydrate or high sucrose/high carbohydrate. DMFS scores were very low in all subjects but increased with between- meal snack intakes, particularly in the high sucrose/low carbohydrate category. Conclusions: Malaysian students had relatively low frequencies of food intakes but there was still an association between frequency of between-meal snacks and caries rates, as in Western countries. 2011 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://eprints.um.edu.my/3754/1/Frequency_of_food_intakes_and_dental_caries_in_a_Malaysian_dental_student_group.pdf Sulinda, D. and Marina, M.M. and Rahim, Z.H.A. and Ferguson, D.B. (2011) Frequency of food intakes and dental caries in a Malaysian dental student group. Pakistan Journal of Medical Sciences, 27 (3). pp. 690-692. ISSN 1682-024X
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
language English
topic RK Dentistry
spellingShingle RK Dentistry
Sulinda, D.
Marina, M.M.
Rahim, Z.H.A.
Ferguson, D.B.
Frequency of food intakes and dental caries in a Malaysian dental student group
description Objective: Although the relationship between snack food eating and dental caries has been investigated in the United States and European groups, no data exist for Asian snack foods and diets. Our objective was to investigate snack food eating and dental caries in a Malaysian dental student group. Methodology: Frequency of eating was assessed on a basis of 2 weekday and 2 weekend day diaries for non-fasting students and one weekday and one weekend day during Ramadan, and a similar set outside Ramadan for fasting students. The sucrose and carbohydrate composition of between meal snacks and drinks was identified. The total number of decayed, missing, and filled teeth was recorded by two dental examiners. Results: The modal number of total food intakes was 2 or 3 per day on both weekdays and weekends. The number of between-meal snacks and drinks varied between 0 and 5. They were either high sucrose/low carbohydrate or high sucrose/high carbohydrate. DMFS scores were very low in all subjects but increased with between- meal snack intakes, particularly in the high sucrose/low carbohydrate category. Conclusions: Malaysian students had relatively low frequencies of food intakes but there was still an association between frequency of between-meal snacks and caries rates, as in Western countries.
format Article
author Sulinda, D.
Marina, M.M.
Rahim, Z.H.A.
Ferguson, D.B.
author_facet Sulinda, D.
Marina, M.M.
Rahim, Z.H.A.
Ferguson, D.B.
author_sort Sulinda, D.
title Frequency of food intakes and dental caries in a Malaysian dental student group
title_short Frequency of food intakes and dental caries in a Malaysian dental student group
title_full Frequency of food intakes and dental caries in a Malaysian dental student group
title_fullStr Frequency of food intakes and dental caries in a Malaysian dental student group
title_full_unstemmed Frequency of food intakes and dental caries in a Malaysian dental student group
title_sort frequency of food intakes and dental caries in a malaysian dental student group
publishDate 2011
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/3754/1/Frequency_of_food_intakes_and_dental_caries_in_a_Malaysian_dental_student_group.pdf
http://eprints.um.edu.my/3754/
_version_ 1643687191605411840