Change in Oral Health-Related Quality of Life Following Minimally Invasive Aesthetic Treatment for Children with Molar Incisor Hypomineralisation: A Prospective Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Overall Study Design
2.2. Recruitment of Participants
- Children diagnosed with MIH, according to well established clinical criteria [21] and confirmed by a consultant in paediatric dentistry (H.R.);
- children with MIH and who had a visible enamel opacity involving at least one permanent incisor;
- children who requested improvement in their incisor aesthetics; and
- children aged between 7 and 16 years.
- Children who presented with an acute dental symptom and required urgent treatment;
- children who were planned to undergo active treatment for their hypomineralised molars during the proposed study period (e.g., extractions) or orthodontic treatment;
- children with any dental or facial anomaly other than MIH (e.g., hypodontia, cleft lip, and palate);
- children with compromised incisor aesthetics due to a traumatic dental injury, tooth surface loss, or caries;
- children with severe learning disabilities who were unable to understand and take part in the research, even with support from the research team; and
- children or parents who did not speak English.
2.3. Sample Size Calculation
2.4. Data Collection and Measures
- Age;
- gender;
- postcode address: To allow categorisation of the participant’s socioeconomic status according to quintile, where 5 represents the greatest level of deprivation and 1 the least [25]; and
- ethnic group (self-reported by the parent/carer).
2.5. Statistical Analysis
2.6. Clinical Intervention
3. Results
3.1. Participants
3.2. Oral Health-Related Quality of Life
3.3. Attendance and Treatment
4. Discussion
4.1. Study Strengths
4.2. Limitations
4.3. Clinical Implications
4.4. Future Research
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Patient Variable | n (%) Mean (SD, Range) | |
---|---|---|
Age (years) | All Participants | 10.95 (2.54, 7–16) |
7–10 | 50 (53.8) | |
11–16 | 43 (46.2) | |
Gender | Male | 38 (40.9) |
Female | 55 (59.1) | |
Ethnic background | White British/Northern European | 85 (91.4) |
Any other group | 8 (8.6) | |
Deprivation score | 1st Quintile (least deprived) | 18 (19.4) |
2nd Quintile | 24 (25.8) | |
3rd Quintile | 14 (15.1) | |
4th Quintile | 14 (15.1) | |
5th Quintile (most deprived) | 23 (24.7) | |
Number of treated teeth | 3.1 (2.65, 1–12) | |
Treatment regimen | Microabrasion alone | 6 (6.5) |
ICON alone | 4 (4.3) | |
Microabrasion followed by ICON | 66 (71.0) | |
Microabrasion followed by tooth whitening | 8 (8.6) | |
Microbrasion and/or ICON followed by resin composite restoration | 2 (2.2) | |
Tooth whitening followed by microabrasion and/or ICON | 7 (7.5) |
C-OHIP-SF19 Participants | Pre-Treatment C-OHIP-SF19 Mean (SD, Range) | Post-Treatment C-OHIP-SF19 Mean (SD, Range) | Change in C-OHIP-SF19 Score | Significance (p) Wilcoxon Signed Rank Test | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Overall score | All participants (n = 93) | 47.00 (9.29, 0–76) | 58.24 (9.42, 0–76) | 11.24 | p < 0.001 |
Female (n = 55) | 46.15 (9.48, 0–76) | 58.51 (9.77, 0–76) | 12.36 | p < 0.001 | |
Male (n = 38) | 48.24 (8.99, 0–76) | 57.84 (9.01, 0–76) | 9.60 | p < 0.001 | |
Age 7–10 (n = 50) | 47.06 (8.89, 0–76) | 59.66 (9.38, 0–76) | 12.60 | p < 0.001 | |
Age 11–16 (n = 43) | 46.93 (9.85, 0–76) | 56.58 (9.30, 0–76) | 9.65 | p < 0.001 | |
Oral health domain | All participants (n = 93) | 11.26 (2.78, 0–20) | 14.15 (3.34, 0–20) | 2.89 | p < 0.001 |
Female (n = 55) | 11.13 (2.93, 0–20) | 14.55 (3.42, 0–20) | 3.42 | p < 0.001 | |
Male (n = 38) | 11.45 (2.58, 0–20) | 13.58 (3.32, 0–20) | 2.13 | p < 0.001 | |
Age 7–10 (n = 50) | 10.58 (2.85, 0–20) | 14.06 (3.34, 0–20) | 3.48 | p < 0.001 | |
Age 11–16 (n = 43) | 12.05 (2.51, 0–20) | 14.26 (3.50, 0–20) | 2.21 | p < 0.001 | |
Functional wellbeing domain | All participants (n = 93) | 13.28 (2.59, 0–16) | 14.16 (1.87, 0–16) | 0.88 | p < 0.001 |
Female (n = 55) | 13.35 (2.25, 0–16) | 14.20 (1.86, 0–16) | 0.85 | p < 0.011 | |
Male (n = 38) | 13.18 (3.04, 0–16) | 14.10 (1.93, 0–16) | 0.92 | p < 0.030 | |
Age 7–10 (n = 50) | 13.20 (2.24, 0–16) | 13.98 (1.85, 0–16) | 0.78 | p < 0.016 | |
Age 11–16 (n = 43) | 13.37 (2.97, 0–16) | 14.37 (1.90, 0–16) | 1.00 | p < 0.020 | |
Socio-emotional wellbeing domain | All participants (n = 93) | 22.46 (7.67, 0–40) | 29.92 (6.42, 0–40) | 7.46 | p < 0.001 |
Female (n = 55) | 21.67 (8.22, 0–40) | 29.76 (6.70, 0–40) | 8.09 | p < 0.001 | |
Male (n = 38) | 23.60 (6.81, 0–40) | 30.15 (6.05, 0–40) | 6.55 | p < 0.001 | |
Age 7–10 (n = 50) | 23.28 (7.76, 0–40) | 31.62 (6.06, 0–40) | 8.34 | p < 0.001 | |
Age 11–16 (n = 43) | 21.51 (7.61, 0–40) | 27.95 (6.32, 0–40) | 6.44 | p < 0.001 |
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Hasmun, N.; Lawson, J.; Vettore, M.V.; Elcock, C.; Zaitoun, H.; Rodd, H. Change in Oral Health-Related Quality of Life Following Minimally Invasive Aesthetic Treatment for Children with Molar Incisor Hypomineralisation: A Prospective Study. Dent. J. 2018, 6, 61. https://doi.org/10.3390/dj6040061
Hasmun N, Lawson J, Vettore MV, Elcock C, Zaitoun H, Rodd H. Change in Oral Health-Related Quality of Life Following Minimally Invasive Aesthetic Treatment for Children with Molar Incisor Hypomineralisation: A Prospective Study. Dentistry Journal. 2018; 6(4):61. https://doi.org/10.3390/dj6040061
Chicago/Turabian StyleHasmun, Noren, Jennifer Lawson, Mario V. Vettore, Claire Elcock, Halla Zaitoun, and Helen Rodd. 2018. "Change in Oral Health-Related Quality of Life Following Minimally Invasive Aesthetic Treatment for Children with Molar Incisor Hypomineralisation: A Prospective Study" Dentistry Journal 6, no. 4: 61. https://doi.org/10.3390/dj6040061
APA StyleHasmun, N., Lawson, J., Vettore, M. V., Elcock, C., Zaitoun, H., & Rodd, H. (2018). Change in Oral Health-Related Quality of Life Following Minimally Invasive Aesthetic Treatment for Children with Molar Incisor Hypomineralisation: A Prospective Study. Dentistry Journal, 6(4), 61. https://doi.org/10.3390/dj6040061