Prevalence and characteristics of areca nut chewers among junior high school students in Changhua county, Taiwan.

Some studies indicate that betel quid and its ingredients chewing can produce cell mutagenicity and tumorigenicity. In Taiwan studies, betel quid chewing is the main cause of submucous fibrosis and oral cancer. Understanding the distribution and characteristics of the areca nut chewing population is one of the first steps in the effort to prevent these oral diseases. A stratified cluster random sample of 2442 junior high school students in Changhua county, Taiwan, were surveyed for the habit of areca nut chewing. Significantly more male students chewed areca nut than female students (9.2% vs 0.9%). The proportion of students who were chewing areca nuts increased with increasing (seventh to ninth) grades. Areca nut was used by junior high school students at a higher rate in village (rural) areas as compared to town (semi-urban) and city (urban) areas (6.4%, 3.7% and 3.0%, respectively). More students in the ordinary achievement classes were chewing areca nuts than those in the high achievement classes (8.4% vs 1.6%). Areca nut chewing students tended to have users in their families. Cigarette smoking and alcohol drinking were positively associated with areca nut chewing. More than half (53.6%) of the areca nut chewing students first experimented with this habit with a family member, most often the father or grandfather.

[1]  P. Balaram,et al.  Pathogenesis of oral submucous fibrosis. Relationship to risk factors associated with oral cancer , 1992, Cancer.

[2]  R. Velleman,et al.  The environmental intergenerational transmission of alcohol problems: a comparison of two hypotheses. , 1991, The British journal of medical psychology.

[3]  Rajanna,et al.  A population-based case-control investigation on cancers of the oral cavity in Bangalore, India. , 1990, British Journal of Cancer.

[4]  R. Sankaranarayanan Oral cancer in India: an epidemiologic and clinical review. , 1990, Oral surgery, oral medicine, and oral pathology.

[5]  N. Day,et al.  A case‐control investigation of cancer of the oral tongue and the floor of the mouth in Southern India , 1989, International journal of cancer.

[6]  D. Wiesner Betel‐nut withdrawal , 1987, The Medical journal of Australia.

[7]  A. Rao,et al.  Embryotoxicity of betel nuts in mice. , 1985, Toxicology.

[8]  D. Hoffmann,et al.  A study of betel quid carcinogenesis. 3. 3-(Methylnitrosamino)-propionitrile, a powerful carcinogen in F344 rats. , 1984, Carcinogenesis.

[9]  A. Rao,et al.  Induction of in vivo sister chromatid exchanges by arecaidine, a betel nut alkaloid, in mouse bone-marrow cells. , 1984, Cancer letters.

[10]  Y. Shiau,et al.  Submucous fibrosis in Taiwan. , 1979, Oral surgery, oral medicine, and oral pathology.

[11]  J. Nair,et al.  Correlation of mutagenicity and tumorigenicity of betel quid and its ingredients. , 1983, Nutrition and cancer.

[12]  T. Hirayama An epidemiological study of oral and pharyngeal cancer in Central and South-East Asia. , 1966, Bulletin of the World Health Organization.