...
首页> 外文期刊>American journal of human biology: the official journal of the Human Biology Council >Explaining sex differences in dental caries prevalence: saliva, hormones, and 'life-history' etiologies.
【24h】

Explaining sex differences in dental caries prevalence: saliva, hormones, and 'life-history' etiologies.

机译:解释龋齿患病率的性别差异:唾液,激素和“生命史”病因。

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例
           

摘要

When dental caries rates are reported by sex, females are typically found to exhibit higher prevalence rates than males. This finding is generally true for diverse cultures with different subsistence systems and for a wide range of chronological periods. Exceptions exist, but are not common. In this paper, we present new data for sex differences in dental caries rates among the Guanches (Tenerife, Canary Islands), summarize results of meta-analyses of dental caries prevalence, and emphasize new research that stresses the critical role of female hormones and life-history events in the etiology of dental caries. Among the Guanches, corrected tooth-count caries rates for females (8.8%, 158/1,790) are approximately twice the frequency of caries among males (4.5%, 68/1,498). Higher caries prevalence among females is often explained by one of three factors: 1) earlier eruption of teeth in girls, hence longer exposure of girls' teeth to the cariogenic oral environment, 2) easier access to food supplies by women and frequent snacking during food preparation, and 3) pregnancy. Anthropologists tend to favor explanations involving behavior, including sexual division of labor and women's domestic role in food production. By contrast, the causal pathways through which pregnancy contributes to poorer oral health and higher caries rates are deemphasized or discounted. This paper presents recent research on physiological changes associated with fluctuating hormone levels during individual life histories, and the impact these changes have on the oral health of women. The biochemical composition of saliva and overall saliva flow rate are modified in several important ways by hormonal fluctuations during events such as puberty, menstruation, and pregnancy, making the oral environment significantly more cariogenic for women than for men. These results suggest that hormonal fluctuations can have a dramatic effect on the oral health of women, and constitute an important causal factor in explaining sex differences in caries rates.
机译:当按性别报告龋齿发生率时,通常发现女性的患病率高于男性。这一发现通常适用于具有不同生存系统的多种文化,并适用于不同的时间序列。存在例外,但并不常见。在本文中,我们提供了关氏(特内里费岛,加那利群岛)之间龋齿发生率性别差异的新数据,总结了龋齿患病率的荟萃分析结果,并强调了强调女性荷尔蒙和生命至关重要的新研究。龋病病史中的历史事件。在男女关系中,校正后的女性龋齿发生率(8.8%,158 / 1,790)大约是男性龋齿发生率(4.5%,68 / 1,498)的两倍。女性龋齿患病率较高通常是由以下三个因素之一解释的:1)女孩的牙齿萌发较早,因此女孩的牙齿在有龋齿的口腔环境中暴露的时间更长; 2)妇女更容易获得食物,并且在饮食期间经常吃零食准备,以及3)怀孕。人类学家倾向于赞成涉及行为的解释,包括性别分工和妇女在粮食生产中的家庭作用。相比之下,怀孕导致口腔健康不良和龋齿发生率升高的因果路径被忽略或忽略。本文介绍了有关个人生活史中与激素水平波动相关的生理变化的最新研究,以及这些变化对女性口腔健康的影响。唾液的生化组成和总唾液流速以几种重要方式通过诸如青春期,月经和怀孕等事件期间的激素波动而改变,使得女性的口腔环境比男性更易患龋齿。这些结果表明,荷尔蒙波动可以对妇女的口腔健康产生巨大影响,并且是解释龋齿率性别差异的重要因果因素。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号