59 results on '"Brignardello-Petersen R"'
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2. Children and adolescents with Down syndrome seem to have a lower prevalence of caries experience than those without Down syndrome.
3. There is probably a small association between sugar-sweetened beverages and caries burden in 10-year-old children, but there is no evidence of such association among 15-year-old children.
4. Some topical fluoride agents may result in a small decrease in root caries compared with no treatment after 2 years.
5. Resin infiltration reduces the risk of experiencing proximal caries progression after 7 years.
6. Motivational intervention with dental nurse reduces the risk of developing new caries in children who have undergone tooth extraction.
7. Advice on caries prevention and caries risk may be associated with the odds of having unsatisfactory quality restorations in 12-year-old children.
8. No differences in pain or infection in children with carious primary molars treated with a preventive strategy, a biological strategy, or caries removal and restoration.
9. Prevention strategies at school may be effective in reducing the incidence of early childhood caries.
10. Systematic review suggests important variability in the incidence of caries after radiotherapy.
11. Negative dental experiences in early life increase the risk of experiencing tooth loss after 50 years of age.
12. There seems to be no association between uncomplicated traumatic dental injuries and impact on oral health-related quality of life in children and adolescents.
13. Resin infiltration is effective in arresting proximal carious lesions after 3 years, but the magnitude of the benefit is uncertain.
14. Accuracy for predicting caries in preschool-aged children seems to vary across risk assessment tools.
15. Smokers seem to have more caries than nonsmokers, but no causal link can be assumed.
16. Fluoride varnish 4 times a year may reduce the number of surfaces with caries in young children.
17. There may not be an important difference in clinical performance between lined and unlined root caries restorations after 5 years.
18. Very small differences in caries, periodontal parameters, and tooth loss between powered and manual toothbrushing after 11 years.
19. Calcium hydroxide seems to not result in important benefits compared with other liners for treating deep carious lesions in primary teeth.
20. Resin infiltration as an adjunct to fluoride varnish seems to reduce the risk of noncavitated proximal carious lesions' progressing after 2 years in patients at high risk of developing caries.
21. Very low certainty in evidence suggesting no differences in caries development when comparing glass ionomer cement sealants and resin-based sealants.
22. Silver diamine fluoride seems to be effective in preventing and arresting root caries in older adults compared with placebo, but there is very low certainty in the magnitude of the benefit.
23. Nonrestorative Treatments for Caries: Systematic Review and Network Meta-analysis.
24. Oral hygiene instruction does not seem to have a distinct effect in patients with chronic periodontitis and high caries experience.
25. Self-limiting excavation seems to increase the odds of success 1 year after deep carious lesion removal compared with a conventional protocol.
26. Age and time of successive appointment seem to be associated with the success of stepwise excavation procedures.
27. Infiltration or sealing of noncavitated proximal carious lesions is probably effective in preventing their progression compared with noninvasive strategies.
28. People who report practicing interdental cleaning frequently are less likely to have caries and periodontal disease.
29. Evidence suggests a small association between malocclusions and caries in adolescents.
30. There seem to be no differences between the benefits of resin-based sealants with and without fluoride in cooperative children at high risk of developing caries.
31. Hall technique probably has higher success rates than a nonrestorative treatment or conventional restorations in primary molars with carious lesions.
32. Although silver diamine fluoride arrested caries sooner than fluoride varnish, the overall proportion of arrested caries was not importantly different after 30 months.
33. Increasing concentration and application frequency of silver diamine fluoride results in more arrested carious lesions being stained black but no other important adverse effects.
34. Insufficient evidence of the superiority of near-infrared light transillumination over bite-wing digital radiograph for detecting early interproximal carious lesions.
35. Insufficient evidence about the association between caries and type 1 diabetes and metabolic status in children and adolescents.
36. Uncertainty about the accuracy of extraoral bite-wing radiography for detecting proximal caries and marginal bone loss owing to study limitations.
37. There are probably no differences in arrest of white-spot lesions and plaque composition between remineralizing and nonfluoridated toothpastes.
38. Insufficient evidence about the effects of fluoride supplements taken during pregnancy in preventing childhood caries.
39. Resin infiltration is probably effective in reducing the progression of noncavitated proximal carious lesions in primary molars.
40. Frequency of feeding episodes at age 1 year likely to be positively associated with caries at age 3 years.
41. Molar-incisor hypomineralization seems to be associated with caries experience, but the magnitude of this association is yet to be reliably determined.
42. Insufficient evidence for the effectiveness of nonfluoride agents on caries prevention in primary dentition.
43. Insufficient evidence about the influence of tooth characteristics on pit-and-fissure sealant performance.
44. 37% silver diamine fluoride is more effective than 12% silver diamine fluoride in arresting caries in the primary dentition.
45. Tooth loss, periodontal disease, and dental caries may be associated with decreased oral health-related quality of life, but there is no evidence about the magnitude of this association.
46. Untreated dental caries associated with small worsening of oral health-related quality of life in 1- to 3-year-old children.
47. Proximal sealing of permanent first molars adjacent to primary second molars with active distal caries may help prevent carious lesion development and progression after 3 and one-half years.
48. Dental therapists can probably assess decayed, missing, and filled teeth with high accuracy in 5-year-old children.
49. Fissure sealants and fluoride varnish were not different in terms of their effectiveness in preventing dental caries in permanent first molars.
50. Stepwise caries removal seems to result in more successful treatments than nonselective caries removal 5 years after treatment.
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