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A national epidemiological survey of oral mucosal lesions in Malaysia

Authors :
Ishak Abdul Razak
Mohammed Yaacob
Tony Axéll
Prakash C. Gupta
Zubaidah Abdul Majid
Rosnah Binti Zain
Noriaki Ikeda
Source :
Community Dentistry and Oral Epidemiology. 25:377-383
Publication Year :
1997
Publisher :
Wiley, 1997.

Abstract

The prevalence of oral mucosal lesions in Malaysia was determined by examining a representative sample of 11,707 subjects aged 25 years and above throughout the 14 states over a period of 5 months during 1993/1994. A two-stage stratified random sampling was undertaken. A predetermined number of enumeration blocks, the smallest population unit in the census publication, was selected from each state. With the selected enumeration block, a systematic sample of living quarters was chosen with a random start. The survey instrument included a questionnaire on sociodemographic characteristics and a clinical examination. The clinical examination was carried out by 16 specially trained dental public health officers and the diagnosis calibrated with a final concordance rate of 92%. The age in the sample ranged from 25 to 115 years with a mean of 44.5+/-14.0. The sample comprised 40.2% males and 59.8% females; 55.8% were Malays, 29.4% Chinese, 10.0% Indians and 1.2% other ethnic groups. Oral mucosal lesions were detected in 1131 (9.7%) subjects, 5 (0.04%) had oral cancer, 165 (1.4%) had lesions or conditions that may be precancerous (leukoplakia, erythroplakia, submucous fibrosis and lichen planus) and 187 (1.6%) had betel chewer's mucosa. The prevalence of oral precancer was highest amongst Indians (4.0%) and other Bumiputras (the indigenous people of Sabah and Sarawak) (2.5%) while the lowest prevalence was amongst the Chinese (0.5%).

Details

ISSN :
16000528 and 03015661
Volume :
25
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Community Dentistry and Oral Epidemiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e384956cf2c12854bdae67cfd028d7af