The relationship of dietary beta-carotene intake and serum beta- carotene levels to the development of oral lesions in smokeless tobacco users

This study was designed to assess the relationship of dietary and serum beta-carotene to the development of oral lesions in smokeless tobacco users. Eighty eight smokeless tobacco users without oral lesions and 18 with lesions participated in the study. Dietary intake of beta-carotene, personal hea...

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Main Author: Carcaise-Edinboro, Patricia
Other Authors: Human Nutrition and Foods
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/42097
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-04142009-040755/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-420972021-05-08T05:27:02Z The relationship of dietary beta-carotene intake and serum beta- carotene levels to the development of oral lesions in smokeless tobacco users Carcaise-Edinboro, Patricia Human Nutrition and Foods Schnepf, Marilyn I. Kaugars, George Taper, L. Janette Brandt, Richard LD5655.V855 1990.C372 Carotenoids -- Physiological effect Mouth -- Diseases -- Etiology Mouth -- Diseases -- Nutritional aspects Tobacco -- Pathophysiology This study was designed to assess the relationship of dietary and serum beta-carotene to the development of oral lesions in smokeless tobacco users. Eighty eight smokeless tobacco users without oral lesions and 18 with lesions participated in the study. Dietary intake of beta-carotene, personal health habits and selected dietary intake were analyzed by questionnaire. Serum levels were assessed by high pressure liquid chromotography. No correlation between dietary beta-carotene intake and serum beta-carotene levels was observed. Results of t-test analysis indicated no significant difference in the mean serum or dietary intake of beta-carotene between the groups. Mean serum beta-carotene for group-I, users without oral lesions and group-2, users with oral lesions were 12.3 ug/dl(I.02 SE), and 10.6 ug/dl(1.59 SE), respectively. Stepwise regression techniques were employed to assess the influence of selected variables on serum beta-carotene. The effects of smoking, smokeless tobacco exposure, alcohol consumption, and age as well as other dietary indices were evaluated. Age (O.015,p<O.OOl) was the only factor found to influence serum beta-carotene levels. The small sample size and variability within groups may have decreased the liklihood of observing statistical significance for serum beta-carotene between groups. Master of Science 2014-03-14T21:33:50Z 2014-03-14T21:33:50Z 1990-06-16 2009-04-14 2009-04-14 2009-04-14 Thesis Text etd-04142009-040755 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/42097 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-04142009-040755/ en OCLC# 22437685 LD5655.V855_1990.C372.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ viii, 75 leaves BTD application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic LD5655.V855 1990.C372
Carotenoids -- Physiological effect
Mouth -- Diseases -- Etiology
Mouth -- Diseases -- Nutritional aspects
Tobacco -- Pathophysiology
spellingShingle LD5655.V855 1990.C372
Carotenoids -- Physiological effect
Mouth -- Diseases -- Etiology
Mouth -- Diseases -- Nutritional aspects
Tobacco -- Pathophysiology
Carcaise-Edinboro, Patricia
The relationship of dietary beta-carotene intake and serum beta- carotene levels to the development of oral lesions in smokeless tobacco users
description This study was designed to assess the relationship of dietary and serum beta-carotene to the development of oral lesions in smokeless tobacco users. Eighty eight smokeless tobacco users without oral lesions and 18 with lesions participated in the study. Dietary intake of beta-carotene, personal health habits and selected dietary intake were analyzed by questionnaire. Serum levels were assessed by high pressure liquid chromotography. No correlation between dietary beta-carotene intake and serum beta-carotene levels was observed. Results of t-test analysis indicated no significant difference in the mean serum or dietary intake of beta-carotene between the groups. Mean serum beta-carotene for group-I, users without oral lesions and group-2, users with oral lesions were 12.3 ug/dl(I.02 SE), and 10.6 ug/dl(1.59 SE), respectively. Stepwise regression techniques were employed to assess the influence of selected variables on serum beta-carotene. The effects of smoking, smokeless tobacco exposure, alcohol consumption, and age as well as other dietary indices were evaluated. Age (O.015,p<O.OOl) was the only factor found to influence serum beta-carotene levels. The small sample size and variability within groups may have decreased the liklihood of observing statistical significance for serum beta-carotene between groups. === Master of Science
author2 Human Nutrition and Foods
author_facet Human Nutrition and Foods
Carcaise-Edinboro, Patricia
author Carcaise-Edinboro, Patricia
author_sort Carcaise-Edinboro, Patricia
title The relationship of dietary beta-carotene intake and serum beta- carotene levels to the development of oral lesions in smokeless tobacco users
title_short The relationship of dietary beta-carotene intake and serum beta- carotene levels to the development of oral lesions in smokeless tobacco users
title_full The relationship of dietary beta-carotene intake and serum beta- carotene levels to the development of oral lesions in smokeless tobacco users
title_fullStr The relationship of dietary beta-carotene intake and serum beta- carotene levels to the development of oral lesions in smokeless tobacco users
title_full_unstemmed The relationship of dietary beta-carotene intake and serum beta- carotene levels to the development of oral lesions in smokeless tobacco users
title_sort relationship of dietary beta-carotene intake and serum beta- carotene levels to the development of oral lesions in smokeless tobacco users
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/42097
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-04142009-040755/
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