Prevalence of dental agenesis in a sample of Italian orthodontic patients: an epidemiological study
Abstract Background The congenital absence of one or more teeth is a dental anomaly that frequently occurs in the world’s population with a wide variability of distribution. The aim of this study is to assess the current prevalence of dental agenesis in the permanent dentition (excluding third molar...
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doaj-c6eea750acd04133a55d08cf9f42d0142020-11-25T00:49:44ZengSpringerOpenProgress in Orthodontics2196-10422017-10-011811710.1186/s40510-017-0186-9Prevalence of dental agenesis in a sample of Italian orthodontic patients: an epidemiological studyAntonio L. T. Gracco0Serena Zanatta1Filippo Forin Valvecchi2Denis Bignotti3Alessandro Perri4Francesco BacilieroDepartment of Neurosciences, Section of Dentistry, University of PaduaDepartment of Neurosciences, Section of Dentistry, University of PaduaDepartment of Neurosciences, Section of Dentistry, University of PaduaDepartment of Neurosciences, Section of Dentistry, University of PaduaDepartment of Neurosciences, Section of Dentistry, University of PaduaAbstract Background The congenital absence of one or more teeth is a dental anomaly that frequently occurs in the world’s population with a wide variability of distribution. The aim of this study is to assess the current prevalence of dental agenesis in the permanent dentition (excluding third molars) using a sample of Italian orthodontic patients. Methods Panoramic radiographs of 4006 Caucasian children between 9 and 16 years of age (1865 males and 2141 females) performed over a 5-year period (from 2010 to 2015) were carefully examined to identify congenital missing teeth. A chi-square test was used to determine the difference in the prevalence of hypodontia between genders and between arches. Results The prevalence of dental agenesis was 9% (9.1% for females and 8.7% for males). The most common congenitally missing teeth were the mandibular second premolars (20.3 and 18.1%) followed by the upper lateral incisors (17.8 and 17.7%) and the maxillary second premolars (7.4 and 6.3%). The absence of one tooth to five teeth was observed in 344 patients (8.6%), while 15 patients showed from six to nine missing teeth (0.4%). The analysis showed 363 cases of agenesis in the upper arch (0.64%) and 339 in the lower arch (0.60%). Unilateral (4.6%) and bilateral (4.4%) agenesis demonstrated a similar frequency. The most common bilateral missing teeth were the mandibular second premolars (1.9%) and the maxillary lateral incisors (1.6%). Conclusions The results of this study observed a higher prevalence of hypodontia compared to previous studies conducted on the Italian population. Thus, a detailed and careful radiographic examination was important in diagnosing one or more missing teeth. This could help plan the best possible treatments, both esthetically and functionally, for these patients.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40510-017-0186-9HypodontiaPrevalenceDental agenesis |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Antonio L. T. Gracco Serena Zanatta Filippo Forin Valvecchi Denis Bignotti Alessandro Perri Francesco Baciliero |
spellingShingle |
Antonio L. T. Gracco Serena Zanatta Filippo Forin Valvecchi Denis Bignotti Alessandro Perri Francesco Baciliero Prevalence of dental agenesis in a sample of Italian orthodontic patients: an epidemiological study Progress in Orthodontics Hypodontia Prevalence Dental agenesis |
author_facet |
Antonio L. T. Gracco Serena Zanatta Filippo Forin Valvecchi Denis Bignotti Alessandro Perri Francesco Baciliero |
author_sort |
Antonio L. T. Gracco |
title |
Prevalence of dental agenesis in a sample of Italian orthodontic patients: an epidemiological study |
title_short |
Prevalence of dental agenesis in a sample of Italian orthodontic patients: an epidemiological study |
title_full |
Prevalence of dental agenesis in a sample of Italian orthodontic patients: an epidemiological study |
title_fullStr |
Prevalence of dental agenesis in a sample of Italian orthodontic patients: an epidemiological study |
title_full_unstemmed |
Prevalence of dental agenesis in a sample of Italian orthodontic patients: an epidemiological study |
title_sort |
prevalence of dental agenesis in a sample of italian orthodontic patients: an epidemiological study |
publisher |
SpringerOpen |
series |
Progress in Orthodontics |
issn |
2196-1042 |
publishDate |
2017-10-01 |
description |
Abstract Background The congenital absence of one or more teeth is a dental anomaly that frequently occurs in the world’s population with a wide variability of distribution. The aim of this study is to assess the current prevalence of dental agenesis in the permanent dentition (excluding third molars) using a sample of Italian orthodontic patients. Methods Panoramic radiographs of 4006 Caucasian children between 9 and 16 years of age (1865 males and 2141 females) performed over a 5-year period (from 2010 to 2015) were carefully examined to identify congenital missing teeth. A chi-square test was used to determine the difference in the prevalence of hypodontia between genders and between arches. Results The prevalence of dental agenesis was 9% (9.1% for females and 8.7% for males). The most common congenitally missing teeth were the mandibular second premolars (20.3 and 18.1%) followed by the upper lateral incisors (17.8 and 17.7%) and the maxillary second premolars (7.4 and 6.3%). The absence of one tooth to five teeth was observed in 344 patients (8.6%), while 15 patients showed from six to nine missing teeth (0.4%). The analysis showed 363 cases of agenesis in the upper arch (0.64%) and 339 in the lower arch (0.60%). Unilateral (4.6%) and bilateral (4.4%) agenesis demonstrated a similar frequency. The most common bilateral missing teeth were the mandibular second premolars (1.9%) and the maxillary lateral incisors (1.6%). Conclusions The results of this study observed a higher prevalence of hypodontia compared to previous studies conducted on the Italian population. Thus, a detailed and careful radiographic examination was important in diagnosing one or more missing teeth. This could help plan the best possible treatments, both esthetically and functionally, for these patients. |
topic |
Hypodontia Prevalence Dental agenesis |
url |
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40510-017-0186-9 |
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