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Active clinical trials for "Dental Caries"

Results 451-460 of 806

Early Childhood Caries Prevention at a Pediatric Clinic

Dental Caries

This purpose of this study was to evaluate effectiveness of a risk-based dental caries prevention program conducted by dental personnel at an urban pediatric primary care clinic serving largely low-income residents of Baltimore, Maryland, and to appraise this program as a model for similar urban pediatric settings.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

ZnO Nanoparticles Coated Orthodontic Molar Tube

EvaluationsDiagnostic Self7 more

Orthodontic treatment is an elective procedure to improve the patient's dentofacial appearance. The complex design of fixed appliances provides a platform that leads to increased plaque accumulation around orthodontic brackets. So, the risk to develop demineralization area adjacent to orthodontic brackets is a major barrier in achieving this goal. Oral hygiene is greatly complicated following the placement of fixed orthodontic Appliances. Molar tube in place are considered for nearly all patients experiencing fixed orthodontic therapy over the whole treatment period, which normally lasts 1.5 to 2 years. To the best of the authors' knowledge, the application and antimicrobial efficacy of zinc oxide (ZnO) nanoparticles coating on orthodontic molar tube material has not been integrated clinically. White spot lesions during orthodontic treatment have a documented etiology. Briefly, the accumulation of plaque and food around brackets, bands, wires, and other attachments caused decreased pH and increased S. mutans colonization, which led to the possibility of clinical demineralization. The aims of study are to assess the antimicrobial effect of nanoparticle coated stainless steel orthodontic molar tube material (OMT) with zinc oxide (ZnO) nanoparticles in relative to uncoated orthodontic molar tube (UOMT) against the streptococcus. mutans& lactobacllius bacteria that cause white spot lesion around the fixed orthodontic appliance. .

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Equal Oral Health in Children: The Hageby-model

Dental Caries in ChildrenEconomic Problems6 more

Pregnant women - living in thecatchment area of a public dental clinic with known higher caries experience and generally lower socioeconomical status than at other dental clinics in the Region - are recruited for the study. Repeated information and surveys of dental knowledge, dental habits and medical conditions etc. is sample. Before birth, one month after birth, and 12 and 18 months after birth of the Child, the mother repeatedly answers questionnaires and recieves information about dental care. At 18 months,and at the 3- and 6-year dental examinations the caries experience dmft/deft is registered. All Children and accompanying parent receives an individual caries preventive program between the examinations. Evaluation will be focused on possible caries sreduction and Health econimic aspects of the interventions.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Preventing Caries With Silver Diamine Fluoride

Dental Caries

Background: Early childhood caries (tooth decay, ECC) affected 55% 5-year-old Hong Kong children, and 70% of these children had gross destruction of the upper anterior teeth with negative long-term impacts on health and quality of life. The existing standard of care for prevention of ECC, topical application of 5% sodium fluoride (NaF) varnish, is inadequate. In Hong Kong and other parts of the world, 38% silver diamine fluoride (SDF) solution, applied topically to cavities, is used to arrest ECC. Work published by our research group suggests it likely also has a preventive effect of ECC. Moreover, SDF has been shown to be preventive in tooth decay in permanent teeth. Nevertheless, no pivotal clinical trial has been performed to support a change in usual practice. Aim: This is a Phase II single-centre randomized, double-blind, active-controlled, parallel-group pragmatic trial with two arms to assess the effectiveness of 38% SDF and 5% NaF in preventing new caries lesions in primary anterior teeth. Methods: 688 three-year-old kindergarten children who are healthy will be recruited, stratified by school, and block randomized to receive either 38% SDF (treatment group) or 5% NaF (standard treatment group) therapy on primary upper anterior teeth. This sample size is sufficient for a superiority trial with power at 90%, allowing for a 15% dropout rate. The primary outcome is the number of sound tooth surfaces that become cavitated caries per child at 12-month follow-up. The secondary outcome is the number of carious tooth surfaces developed after baseline that become arrested at 12-month for each child. Dental examinations for the status of caries (active or arrested) will be conducted by the same calibrated examiner. The examiner, children and children's parents will be blind to treatment allocation. Parents will be surveyed to study the children's oral health-related behaviours and socioeconomic backgrounds, which will allow the adjustment for effect modification. Possible results and implications: If the results are as anticipated, it will help change the standard of care for caries prevention. If adopted in Hong Kong, SDF therapy will prevent 20,800 (13% of the 160,000) kindergarten children from having caries developed in their anterior teeth, thus reduce significantly the burden of ECC of the children and related stress of their family. Moreover, the results will be widely available and increase adoption of SDF in other countries to reduce the global burden of ECC among children.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Effect of a 2-week Sugar Stress on Bacterial Profiles in Whole Saliva

Dental CariesGingivitis

Dental caries is a non-communicable biofilm-mediated disease affecting both crown and exposed root surfaces in the primary and permanent dentitions. The carious process involves interactions between the biofilm formed on the tooth surface, sugars, salivary and genetic factors. Based on more than 100 years of research, there is unequivocal evidence that dietary fermentable carbohydrates (sugars and starch) play a key role in caries initiation and progression. In this context, sucrose deserves special attention; apart from being rapidly converted into acids it is also synthesized into extracellular glucans, fructans and intracellular storage compounds. According to the ecological plaque hypothesis, it is generally accepted that sucrose exposure is fueling and driving the stable and diverse symbiotic oral biofilm to a dysbiotic form with a reduced diversity and overgrowth of acidogenic and acid-tolerating species. Such typical bacterial profiles have demonstrated in subjects with different stages of caries in cross-sectional settings but the timing associated with a sugar provocations is less known. Moreover, the use of probiotic bacteria in adjunct to regular oral care to support biofilm diversity and prevent dental caries has gained momentum in recent years. It has been demonstrated that probiotic supplements can increase salivary pH, and reduce the counts of salivary S. mutans, thereby exert a stabilizing effect on the oral microbiota. In this context, it is of interest to explore whether or not the use of beneficial bacteria can counteract a sugar-driven shift in the salivary microbiota. Another question of interest is to study if the oral biofilm has a colonization memory similar to that of the gastro-intestinal tract and the suggested study design could possibly enlighten this area of research.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Effect of Probiotics on Oral Homeostasis During Sugar Stress

Dental CariesProbiotics1 more

The present study is a double-blinded randomized clinical trial with a duration of 28 days.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Evaluation of the Remineralizing and Antibacterial Effect of Natural Versus Synthetic Materials...

Dentin Caries

The present study will be performed to evaluate: The remineralizing effect of natural materials versus synthetic materials on deep carious dentin after selective caries removal. The antibacterial effect of natural materials versus synthetic materials on deep carious dentin.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

An Evaluation of Protective Effects of OpalSeal™ Against Early Dental Decay in Orthodontic Patients...

Cavities of Teeth

Fluoride is very effective in preventing dental decay (cavities) when applied in the form of a varnish on tooth surfaces. The purpose of this study is to verify if fluoride-releasing primer (OpalSeal) offers more protection against early dental decay (cavity) compared to conventional primer (Transbond XT) during treatment with braces.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Pre-etching of Dentin Before Restorations With High Viscosity Glass Ionomer Cement

Dental Caries

The objective of this randomized clinical trial is to evaluate the survival of restoration with high viscosity glass ionomer cement (HVGIC) with pre-etching with polyacrilic acid compared with no pre-etching in order to treat occlusoproximais caries lesion in primary molars, as well as the impact of those treatments in the caries lesion progression, the cost-efficacy of the procedures and the discomfort reported by the patient. Children of 4 to 8 years will be selected in the Pediatric Dentistry Clinic of Universidade Ibirapuera. 192 teeth will be randomized in 2 experimental groups: (1) HVGIC restoration with pre-etching and (2) HVGIC restoration with no pre-etching. Will be considered as primary outcome the survival of the restoration evaluated after 6, 12, and 24 months by two trained examiners. The carious lesions progression will be evaluated after 24 months of follow-up. The time of the treatments and the cost of the materials will be considered to estimate the cost-efficacy of each treatment. The discomfort reported by the participant will be measured after each procedure following the Wong-Baker scale. For the primary outcome, Kaplan-Meier survival and the Long-Rank test will be used in order to compare the two groups. Cox regression will be performed in order to evaluate thee influence of explanatory variables on the outcome.

Withdrawn3 enrollment criteria

BEhavioral EConomics for Oral Health iNnovation Pilot Trial

ToothbrushingDental Plaque3 more

This Phase I randomized pilot trial will assess the efficacy of a fixed incentive payment program and drawing incentive payment program versus a control program to promote early childhood caries (ECC) preventive health behaviors (i.e., toothbrushing performance and dental visit attendance) for young children of predominantly Latino parents/caregivers enrolled in/waitlisted for Early Head Start (EHS) home visit programs.

Completed13 enrollment criteria
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