Plaque, caries, periodontal diseases, and acculturation among Yanomamö Indians, Venezuela |
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Authors: | C. J. Donnelly L. A. Thomson H. M. Stiles C. Brewer J. V. Neel J. A. Brunelle |
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Affiliation: | National Caries Program, National Institute of Dental Research, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, and Department of Human Genetics, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | abstract The number of DM and d teeth and surfaces was recorded for 220 Yanomamö, Indians from three groups of villages with different degrees of contact with Western culture. Specimens of plaque were taken from the teeth, transported in a holding solution, cultured and examined for specific oral streptococci. In addition, the periodontal health and oral by giene of one group of villagers were assessed using the Russell PI and the Greene & Ver million OHIS. Caries experience among the Yanomamö was shown to be positively associated with exposure to Western culture. S. mutans was recovered with about the same frequency from specimens taken from the teeth of Indians living at all three village locations. However, the presence of S. mutans alone did not account for the disparity in dental caries scores. The examinees had abundant and persistent accumulations of soft deposits on their teeth accompanied by markedly inflamed gingival tissues. However, periodontal pockets and loss of appreciable amounts of bone did not appear as early in life nor were they as sever as reported for some other populations which practice little oral hygiene. Those disparities in the distribution of plaque-induced oral diseases between Western populations and the Yanomamö warrant further study. |
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Keywords: | dental caries dental plaque Indians periodontal disease |
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