Sucking habits and anterior open bite among Venezuelan and Brazilian children

Culturally different population groups have distinct infant feeding practices, which presumably may be related to diverse occlusal features in the primary dentition. Aim: To investigate the associations between nutritive and non-nutritive sucking habits and the prevalence of anterior open bite, in c...

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Main Authors: Andréia Carvalho Cardoso, Marisela González de Bello, Flávio Vellini-Ferreira, Rívea Inês Ferreira-Santos
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidade Estadual de Campinas 2010-12-01
Series:Brazilian Journal of Oral Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://periodicos.sbu.unicamp.br/ojs/index.php/bjos/article/view/8640891
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spelling doaj-18e46f161ac34abca4f51bd21b358d062021-07-15T14:04:06ZengUniversidade Estadual de CampinasBrazilian Journal of Oral Sciences1677-32252010-12-0113310.20396/bjos.v13i3.8640891Sucking habits and anterior open bite among Venezuelan and Brazilian childrenAndréia Carvalho Cardoso0Marisela González de Bello1Flávio Vellini-Ferreira2Rívea Inês Ferreira-Santos3Vellini InstituteVellini InstituteVellini InstituteUniversidade Paulista - UNIPCulturally different population groups have distinct infant feeding practices, which presumably may be related to diverse occlusal features in the primary dentition. Aim: To investigate the associations between nutritive and non-nutritive sucking habits and the prevalence of anterior open bite, in children from Aragua-Venezuela and São Paulo-Brazil. Methods: Seven calibrated examiners (κ = 0.89-1.0) performed clinical assessments in Venezuelans (N = 809) and Brazilians (N = 1,377) aged 3-6 years. Sucking habits were investigated using questionnaires answered by the mothers. Data were analyzed using logistic regression models (α = 0.05). Results: Among 380 children with anterior open bite, 309 were Brazilians. Approximately 65% of Brazilians with pacifier-sucking habit lasting beyond 3 years of age had this malocclusion. Brazilians who prolonged pacifier and digit-sucking habits beyond 3 years of age have, respectively, 68.5 and 14.5 times more chances of presenting anterior open bite than children without sucking habits (p < 0.001). In Venezuelans with open bite, 37.7% had digit-sucking habits beyond 3 years of age, resulting in a high odds ratio (9.3; p < 0.001) when compared to children without this habit. No significant effect was found for bottle feeding. However, non-breastfed Venezuelan children or those breastfed for periods shorter than 6 months have a two-fold higher chance of presenting anterior open bite than children who were breastfed for longer periods, p = 0.008. Conclusions: Infant feeding had some effect on Venezuelan children, since insufficient breastfeeding was related to a higher prevalence of anterior open bite. Pacifier-sucking was more prevalent in Brazilians, corresponding to pronounced chances (8-68 times greater) of diagnosing anterior open bite in pacifier users compared to non-users. Among Venezuelans, on the other hand, digit-sucking effect surpassed that of pacifier use and was associated with far higher chances (6-9 times) for this malocclusion.https://periodicos.sbu.unicamp.br/ojs/index.php/bjos/article/view/8640891Sucking behaviorOpen biteChild welfarePublic health dentistry
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andréia Carvalho Cardoso
Marisela González de Bello
Flávio Vellini-Ferreira
Rívea Inês Ferreira-Santos
spellingShingle Andréia Carvalho Cardoso
Marisela González de Bello
Flávio Vellini-Ferreira
Rívea Inês Ferreira-Santos
Sucking habits and anterior open bite among Venezuelan and Brazilian children
Brazilian Journal of Oral Sciences
Sucking behavior
Open bite
Child welfare
Public health dentistry
author_facet Andréia Carvalho Cardoso
Marisela González de Bello
Flávio Vellini-Ferreira
Rívea Inês Ferreira-Santos
author_sort Andréia Carvalho Cardoso
title Sucking habits and anterior open bite among Venezuelan and Brazilian children
title_short Sucking habits and anterior open bite among Venezuelan and Brazilian children
title_full Sucking habits and anterior open bite among Venezuelan and Brazilian children
title_fullStr Sucking habits and anterior open bite among Venezuelan and Brazilian children
title_full_unstemmed Sucking habits and anterior open bite among Venezuelan and Brazilian children
title_sort sucking habits and anterior open bite among venezuelan and brazilian children
publisher Universidade Estadual de Campinas
series Brazilian Journal of Oral Sciences
issn 1677-3225
publishDate 2010-12-01
description Culturally different population groups have distinct infant feeding practices, which presumably may be related to diverse occlusal features in the primary dentition. Aim: To investigate the associations between nutritive and non-nutritive sucking habits and the prevalence of anterior open bite, in children from Aragua-Venezuela and São Paulo-Brazil. Methods: Seven calibrated examiners (κ = 0.89-1.0) performed clinical assessments in Venezuelans (N = 809) and Brazilians (N = 1,377) aged 3-6 years. Sucking habits were investigated using questionnaires answered by the mothers. Data were analyzed using logistic regression models (α = 0.05). Results: Among 380 children with anterior open bite, 309 were Brazilians. Approximately 65% of Brazilians with pacifier-sucking habit lasting beyond 3 years of age had this malocclusion. Brazilians who prolonged pacifier and digit-sucking habits beyond 3 years of age have, respectively, 68.5 and 14.5 times more chances of presenting anterior open bite than children without sucking habits (p < 0.001). In Venezuelans with open bite, 37.7% had digit-sucking habits beyond 3 years of age, resulting in a high odds ratio (9.3; p < 0.001) when compared to children without this habit. No significant effect was found for bottle feeding. However, non-breastfed Venezuelan children or those breastfed for periods shorter than 6 months have a two-fold higher chance of presenting anterior open bite than children who were breastfed for longer periods, p = 0.008. Conclusions: Infant feeding had some effect on Venezuelan children, since insufficient breastfeeding was related to a higher prevalence of anterior open bite. Pacifier-sucking was more prevalent in Brazilians, corresponding to pronounced chances (8-68 times greater) of diagnosing anterior open bite in pacifier users compared to non-users. Among Venezuelans, on the other hand, digit-sucking effect surpassed that of pacifier use and was associated with far higher chances (6-9 times) for this malocclusion.
topic Sucking behavior
Open bite
Child welfare
Public health dentistry
url https://periodicos.sbu.unicamp.br/ojs/index.php/bjos/article/view/8640891
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