Mentally retarded children from one age cohort and their randomly selected controls in one Finnish county were examined for standard of oral hygiene, and their parents and nurses interviewed for information on dental health habits and for other relevant background information. The mentally retarded consumed sugar containing products less frequently than the mentally normal controls. Toothbrushing and fluoride supply was also less common in the retarded than in the healthy. Among the retarded, the dental health habits were most favorable in registered outpatients and least favorable in administratively unknown retarded not included in special welfare. Differences in dental health habits between these subgroups of the retarded were large. In contrast to the findings in the healthy children, frequency of toothbrushing was not associated with the observed standard of oral hygiene in the mentally retarded. The toothbrushing subgroup of the mentally retarded consumed sugar more frequently than the toothbrushing healthy children and commonly used drugs which reduced saliva flow or promoted gingival hyperplasia.
[1]
O. Heinonen,et al.
Dental health of 9--10-year-old mentally retarded children in eastern Finland.
,
1982,
Community dentistry and oral epidemiology.
[2]
D. Tesini.
Age, degree of mental retardation, institutionalization, and socioeconomic status as determinants in the oral hygiene status of mentally retarded individuals.
,
1980,
Community dentistry and oral epidemiology.
[3]
N. Sedransk,et al.
Dental root abnormalities and gingival overgrowth in epileptic patients receiving anticonvulsant therapy.
,
1980,
Journal of periodontology.
[4]
J. R. Babcock.
Incidence of gingival hyperplasia associated with Dilantin therapy in a hospital population.
,
1965,
The Journal of the American Dental Association (1939).