Dental caries and vitamin D status in children in Asia

Dental caries and vitamin D inadequacy are known to affect children worldwide. Vitamin D has a vital role in tooth formation. There is growing evidence linking suboptimal serum vitamin D level with dental caries in children. This paper reviews the literature on both the prevalence of dental caries a...

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Published in:Pediatrics International
Main Author: Almoudi M.M.; Hussein A.S.; Abu Hassan M.I.; Schroth R.J.
Format: Review
Language:English
Published: Blackwell Publishing 2019
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85064843543&doi=10.1111%2fped.13801&partnerID=40&md5=68ff3c41ac3698a53b32a42249a004ae
id 2-s2.0-85064843543
spelling 2-s2.0-85064843543
Almoudi M.M.; Hussein A.S.; Abu Hassan M.I.; Schroth R.J.
Dental caries and vitamin D status in children in Asia
2019
Pediatrics International
61
4
10.1111/ped.13801
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85064843543&doi=10.1111%2fped.13801&partnerID=40&md5=68ff3c41ac3698a53b32a42249a004ae
Dental caries and vitamin D inadequacy are known to affect children worldwide. Vitamin D has a vital role in tooth formation. There is growing evidence linking suboptimal serum vitamin D level with dental caries in children. This paper reviews the literature on both the prevalence of dental caries and of vitamin D deficiency in children in four Asian regions, discusses their associated risk factors, and reviews the global evidence on the association between dental caries and vitamin D in children. Caries prevalence in children ranged from 40% to 97% in Eastern Asia, 38–73.7% in Southern Asia, and 26.5–74.7% in Western Asian countries. Moreover, a higher prevalence of vitamin D deficiency in Asian children was identified, even in countries in equatorial regions, ranging from 2.8% to 65.3% in Eastern Asia, 5–66.7% in Southern Asia, 4–45.5% in Western Asia and 38.1–78.7% in Central Asian countries. Obesity, age, female gender, higher latitude, season, darker skin pigmentation, sunlight protection behaviors, less sunlight exposure and low intake of food containing vitamin D were important factors associated with lower serum vitamin D in Asia. Suboptimal vitamin D level in children may be a significant risk factor for dental caries, and requires further research to ascertain such an association in children in Asia, as well as to understand its exact influence on caries risk and development. © 2019 Japan Pediatric Society
Blackwell Publishing
13288067
English
Review

author Almoudi M.M.; Hussein A.S.; Abu Hassan M.I.; Schroth R.J.
spellingShingle Almoudi M.M.; Hussein A.S.; Abu Hassan M.I.; Schroth R.J.
Dental caries and vitamin D status in children in Asia
author_facet Almoudi M.M.; Hussein A.S.; Abu Hassan M.I.; Schroth R.J.
author_sort Almoudi M.M.; Hussein A.S.; Abu Hassan M.I.; Schroth R.J.
title Dental caries and vitamin D status in children in Asia
title_short Dental caries and vitamin D status in children in Asia
title_full Dental caries and vitamin D status in children in Asia
title_fullStr Dental caries and vitamin D status in children in Asia
title_full_unstemmed Dental caries and vitamin D status in children in Asia
title_sort Dental caries and vitamin D status in children in Asia
publishDate 2019
container_title Pediatrics International
container_volume 61
container_issue 4
doi_str_mv 10.1111/ped.13801
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85064843543&doi=10.1111%2fped.13801&partnerID=40&md5=68ff3c41ac3698a53b32a42249a004ae
description Dental caries and vitamin D inadequacy are known to affect children worldwide. Vitamin D has a vital role in tooth formation. There is growing evidence linking suboptimal serum vitamin D level with dental caries in children. This paper reviews the literature on both the prevalence of dental caries and of vitamin D deficiency in children in four Asian regions, discusses their associated risk factors, and reviews the global evidence on the association between dental caries and vitamin D in children. Caries prevalence in children ranged from 40% to 97% in Eastern Asia, 38–73.7% in Southern Asia, and 26.5–74.7% in Western Asian countries. Moreover, a higher prevalence of vitamin D deficiency in Asian children was identified, even in countries in equatorial regions, ranging from 2.8% to 65.3% in Eastern Asia, 5–66.7% in Southern Asia, 4–45.5% in Western Asia and 38.1–78.7% in Central Asian countries. Obesity, age, female gender, higher latitude, season, darker skin pigmentation, sunlight protection behaviors, less sunlight exposure and low intake of food containing vitamin D were important factors associated with lower serum vitamin D in Asia. Suboptimal vitamin D level in children may be a significant risk factor for dental caries, and requires further research to ascertain such an association in children in Asia, as well as to understand its exact influence on caries risk and development. © 2019 Japan Pediatric Society
publisher Blackwell Publishing
issn 13288067
language English
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