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UnknownNCT03566953

Dietary Influences On Caries Index Among Sudanese And Egyptian Adult Population

Dietary Influences On Caries Index Among Sudanese And Egyptian Adult Population A-Cross_Sectional Study

Status
Unknown
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
12 (estimated)
Sponsor
Cairo University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 40 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

the objective of this study is to compare the caries index between Sudanese and Egyptian adult Population in patients with different diet habits and different oral hygiene state in range of (18-40) years old

Detailed description

A main factor for planning any preventive program is to accurately assess a person's risk of developing a caries. There is a relative lack of data pertaining to adults in the developing world in general and in Sudan in particular. Most of the studies focused on school children. Many people in Sudan do not receive regular dental care and have acute problems when seen by a dentist. In Sudan the dentist-to-patient ratio is 1:33,000 compared with approximately 1:2,000 in most industrialized countries. Relative to the size of the Sudanese population, there are very few dentists and this restricts access to regular dental care. Other factors which influence dental. Attendance in Sudan include the lack of public funding for oral healthcare and dental insurance schemes to ameliorate the cost of care. For this reason, insufficient awareness of the culture of selecting suitable foods to preserve the health of the mouth and teeth, as prevention is better than treatment . The study will help the clinician to compare the incidence of caries between different nationality they have different diet habits ,food traditions , and they have different education and cultural levels as these factors can reflect the health care system , and to determine the effect of these factors clearly on dental caries It also allow the clinician to develop the most suitable preventive treatment plan for each patient by evaluating the main causative factor to patient and to eliminate that factor so that we can arrest an ongoing active lesion and prevent developing a new lesion at lowest therapeutic cost. The patient will be informed in the same visit about the causative factor of the carious lesion in general, the role of diet in particular and instructed about the suggested treatment plan ,to change the lifestyle to the better and strengthen the concept of "prevention is better than treatment"

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2018-11-01
Primary completion
2019-06-01
Completion
2019-06-30
First posted
2018-06-25
Last updated
2018-06-26

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03566953. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.