Epidemiology of Periodontal Diseases Flashcards

1
Q

What is epidemiology?

A

The study of distribution of disease or a physiological condition in human population and the factors that influence this distribution.

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2
Q

What is descriptive epidemiology?

A

Description of the distribution of the disease in different populations.

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3
Q

What is etiologic epidemiology?

A

Consider the aetiology of a disease from the combination of descriptive epidemiological data along with other information e.g genetics, microbiology, sociology etc.

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3
Q

What is analytical epidemiology?

A

Evaluate the consistency of epidemiologic data with hypotheses developed clinically or experimentally.

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4
Q

What is Experimental epidemiology?

A

Provides a basis for developing and evaluating preventative programmes and public health practises.

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5
Q

Why is it important to study epidemiology of diseases?

A

Because knowledge of epidemiology may help us to understand the impact of the disease, any aetiological factors, treatment needs, treatment effects, etc.

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5
Q

What do the terms incidence and prevalence mean in epidemiology?

A

Incidence- the number of new cases per year

Prevalence- the total number of cases within the population

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6
Q

What are some issues for a periodontal epidemiologist?

A

There’s no set, defined parameters which should be measured

This results in variations in national & international studies.

This makes the analysis of data more difficult

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6
Q

How should epidemiological data be measured?

A

Ideally measured as a full assessment for a large data set but this is not practical so alternatives are used e.g partial recordings

This can be difficult in a community setting

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7
Q

How would a periodontal epidemiologist examine the extent & severity of the disease?

A

Severity- the amount of attachment loss in a tooth

Extent- number of teeth affected

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7
Q

What is the problem with the Adult Dental Health Survey (ADH)?

A

It probably significantly underestimates the amount of disease because it’s only a partial mouth recording.

It’s also not completed in the dental clinic

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8
Q

Describe some basic periodontal epidemiology.

A

-Gingivitis is highly prevalent in the adult population (60%+)

-Associated with levels of plaque

-Mild-moderate periodontitis has a prevalence of between 20-35%

-Severe periodontitis is relatively infrequent (10-15%)

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8
Q

What was the ‘natural history of periodontal disease in man’ study?

A

It was a parallel cohort longitudinal study about male tea labourers in Sri Lanka with little/no access to oral care compared to 565 male students & teachers aged 17-31 in Oslo, Norway and the data was collected in 1969.

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9
Q

What were the outcomes of the study?

A

look at the slides

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10
Q

How did the distribution of periodontal disease compare in both populations in the study?

A

look at the slides

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11
Q

Which factors need to be considered when assessing patients’ progression of disease?

A

Site specificity- consider their periodontal phenotype or local factors e.g mouth breather

Susceptibility- is there family history?

Risk- do they have established modifiable risk factors? E.g smoking or poor diabetic control

12
Q

What are some features of low/normal/high risk groups for periodontal disease?

A

look at the slides