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Oral health status among hospitalized patients
Author(s) -
Carrilho Neto A,
De Paula Ramos S,
Sant’ana ACP,
Passanezi E
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
international journal of dental hygiene
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.674
H-Index - 38
eISSN - 1601-5037
pISSN - 1601-5029
DOI - 10.1111/j.1601-5037.2009.00423.x
Subject(s) - medicine , oral hygiene , periodontitis , dentistry , oral health , bleeding on probing
To cite this article:
Int J Dent Hygiene9 , 2011; 21–29
DOI: 10.1111/j.1601‐5037.2009.00423.x
Carrilho Neto A, De Paula Ramos S, Sant’ana ACP, Passanezi E. Oral health status among hospitalized patients. Abstract: Aim: To investigate into oral health status and its association with health status in hospitalized patients. Methods: A total of 82 patients were examined and 49 (59.7%) patients were men. The patients answered a survey and oral examinations to detect the number of teeth, oral hygiene index, prostheses hygiene, oral lesions, caries, dental plaque index (DPI), gingival inflammation index (GI), gingival bleeding index, periodontitis and periodontal index. Results: Oral hygiene was associated with age, but it was not related to physical disability. Difficulty eating was mainly associated with age and tooth loss. All full and partially dentate patients presented dental plaque, 38 (69%) poor oral hygiene, 58 (98.1%) gingival inflammation, 41 (74.5%) periodontal disease and 33 (60%) caries. Oral lesions were detected in 30 (36.5%) and candidiasis ( n = 16, 19.6%) was the most frequent mucous lesion. Caries were associated with smoking and poor oral hygiene. Hospital length of stay and age were associated with increased DPI and GI. Conclusions: The majority of hospitalized patients did not present satisfactory oral hygiene. Caries and periodontal diseases are associated with health behaviours. Increased time length at hospital could increase gingival inflammation and dental plaque accumulation.