nutrition and oral health Flashcards

1
Q

What is diet?

A

Sum of food consumed by a person, it is the food that a person habitually eats

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2
Q

What is nutrition?

A

Quality of food

Food that our body needs to consume daily for our bodies to function optimally

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3
Q

What are developmental enamel defects?

A

Nutritional deficiencies- Vit A and D, malnutrition

Nutritional excesses- fluoride and tetracycline

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4
Q

How can fluoride be ingested?

A
Water supplies  (1ppm)
Salt
School milk (2.65 ppm)
Naturally in tea
Naturally in oily fish
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5
Q

What happens with an excess of fluoride?

A

Dental fluorosis
GIT upset
Respiratory arrest
Death

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6
Q

What is tetracycline?

A

Broad spectrum antibiotic for perio disease, acne, chest infections (CF patients)
If given during enamel formation- sever intrinsic staining

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7
Q

How does Vit D affect dental development?

A

deficiency-> delayed development, hypoplastic enamel

Patients w Vit D resistant rickets (hereditary hypophosphatasia) -> large pulp chambers and pulp horns, enamel hypoplasia, clefts and tubular defects in dentine
(Spontaneous dental abscesses due to tiny cracks and bacteria)

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8
Q

How do calcium and phosphates affect dental development?

A

Reduced enamel hypoplasia in kids (1929-43) after cheap milk, cod liver oil for pregnant women and young children, bread fortified w calcifications

Disorders of calcium and phosphate metabolism-
X linked hypophosphatasia, hypoparathyroidism show increases in enamel defects

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9
Q

How does Vit A affect dental development?

A

Animal studies-

Severe changes in ameloblasts with diet deficient in Vit A-> defective enamel/dentine formation

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10
Q

How does malnutrition affect dental development?

A

Nigerian study (1973)- malnourished kids- enamel hypoplasia in primary incisors, delayed dental eruption

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11
Q

What is erosion?

A

Loss of dental hard tissues by a chemical process that doesn’t involve bacteria
25% of 5 yr olds- loss of tissue into dentine
Risk factors- >2 citrus fruits/day, veg/vegans, >4 fizzy drinks/day (252% risk)

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12
Q

Does a fibrous diet reduce periodontal disease?

A

Some animals- fibrous diet (no evidence in humans)

However, chewing- saliva flow- beneficial and PEG fed children- excessive calculus deposits

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13
Q

Does Vitamin C reduce periodontal disease?

A

Deficiency- detrimental
Disturbed collagen formation
Bleeding, swollen gums, loose teeth

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14
Q

Does folic acid reduce periodontal disease?

A

Most deficient nutrient in adults
DNA synthesis and cell turnover
Maintains epithelial integrity and attachment
Folate mouthwashes/supplements- reduce pregnancy gingivitis

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15
Q

What are nutritional risk factors for oral cancer?

A

Alcohol, tobacco, betel quid, areca nut (seed from fruit of oriental palm)

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16
Q

How do nutrient deficiencies have an effect on the oral mucosa?

A

Vit B12- glossitis, fissured tongue, burning mouth, erosive/ulcerative lesions, angular cheilitis
Vit C- haemorrhage, swelling
Vit K- gingival bleeding
Folic acid- ulcers, burning mouth, depapillation of tongue
Iron- ulcers, glossitis, burning mouth, angular cheilitis
Protein deficiency/kwashiorkor- oedema of tongue, atrophy of papillae, circumoral hypopigmentation

17
Q

What is orofacial granulomatosis?

A

Any age
Delayed hypersensitivity reaction to benzoates (E210-219), cocoa, cinnamon, carvone (found in essential oil, spearmint and dill)

Diffuse facial swelling
Lip enlargement and vertical fissures
Angular cheilitis
Oedema of buccal mucosa 
Mucosal tags (cobblestone)
Aphthous- like ulceration

Biopsy- non-caseating granulomata
Blood tests
Patch tests

18
Q

How is orofacial granulomatosis managed?

A
Referred to med team
Exclusion diet
Symptomatic relief (difflam, gengigel)
Immunosuppressants
Steroids (mouth wash, systemic)