このアイテムのアクセス数: 264
このアイテムのファイル:
ファイル | 記述 | サイズ | フォーマット | |
---|---|---|---|---|
bmj.h5397.pdf | 232.63 kB | Adobe PDF | 見る/開く |
タイトル: | Secondhand smoke and incidence of dental caries in deciduous teeth among children in Japan: Population based retrospective cohort study |
著者: | Tanaka, Shiro ![]() ![]() ![]() Shinzawa, Maki Tokumasu, Hironobu Seto, Kahori Tanaka, Sachiko ![]() ![]() Kawakami, Koji ![]() ![]() ![]() |
著者名の別形: | 田中, 司朗 徳増, 裕宣 瀬戸, 佳穂里 川上, 浩司 |
発行日: | 21-Oct-2015 |
出版者: | BMJ Publishing Group |
誌名: | BMJ |
巻: | 351 |
論文番号: | h5397 |
抄録: | Study question. Does maternal smoking during pregnancy and exposure of infants to tobacco smoke at age 4 months increase the risk of caries in deciduous teeth? Methods. Population based retrospective cohort study of 76 920 children born between 2004 and 2010 in Kobe City, Japan who received municipal health check-ups at birth, 4, 9, and 18 months, and 3 years and had information on household smoking status at age 4 months and records of dental examinations at age 18 months and 3 years. Smoking during pregnancy and exposure of infants to secondhand smoke at age 4 months was assessed by standardised parent reported questionnaires. The main outcome measure was the incidence of caries in deciduous teeth, defined as at least one decayed, missing, or filled tooth assessed by qualified dentists without radiographs. Cox regression was used to estimate hazard ratios of exposure to secondhand smoke compared with having no smoker in the family after propensity score adjustment for clinical and lifestyle characteristics. Study answer and limitations. Prevalence of household smoking among the 76 920 children was 55.3% (n=42 525), and 6.8% (n=5268) had evidence of exposure to tobacco smoke. A total of 12 729 incidents of dental caries were observed and most were decayed teeth (3 year follow-up rate 91.9%). The risk of caries at age 3 years was 14.0% (no smoker in family), 20.0% (smoking in household but without evidence of exposure to tobacco smoke), and 27.6% (exposure to tobacco smoke). The propensity score adjusted hazard ratios of the two exposure groups compared with having no smoker in the family were 1.46 (95% confidence interval 1.40 to 1.52) and 2.14 (1.99 to 2.29), respectively. The propensity score adjusted hazard ratio between maternal smoking during pregnancy and having no smoker in the family was 1.10 (0.97 to 1.25). What this study adds. Exposure to tobacco smoke at 4 months of age was associated with an approximately twofold increased risk of caries, and the risk of caries was also increased among those exposed to household smoking, by 1.5-fold, whereas the effect of maternal smoking during pregnancy was not statistically significant. Funding, competing interests, data sharing. This study was supported by a grant in aid for scientific research 26860415. The authors have no competing interests or additional data to share. |
著作権等: | This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/2433/216502 |
DOI(出版社版): | 10.1136/bmj.h5397 |
PubMed ID: | 26489750 |
出現コレクション: | 学術雑誌掲載論文等 |

このリポジトリに保管されているアイテムはすべて著作権により保護されています。