Oral health of pediatric AIDS patients: a hospital-based study.

Authors
Category Primary study
JournalASDC journal of dentistry for children
Year 1994
The prevalence of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) is steadily increasing among American children. The dental needs of these patients are significant. This study evaluated the oral health of forty children being treated for HIV-infection at the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Eight of twenty-two patients in primary dentition (36 percent) had baby bottle tooth decay (BBTD). These cases required extensive dental restoration usually under general anesthesia. Tooth development was delayed in 31 percent of patients. Candidiasis was the most common soft tissue abnormality, found in 35 percent of children. Preventive and therapeutic dental programs should be instituted to meet the special needs of pediatric AIDS patients.
Epistemonikos ID: 1c151f4a39e0fb8f78997eb13f65a8d4a1702b5d
First added on: Dec 09, 2021