2017
DOI: 10.17957/tpmj/17.3780
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First Primary Tooth Eruption; A Survey of Its Timing in Pakistani Children and Factors Affecting Its Chronology

Abstract: ABSTRACT… Objective: To find out the eruption timing of the first deciduous tooth and the factors affecting its eruption timing. Study Design: This study is hospital based. Setting: Lahore and Rajana. Period: 07.01.2016 to 28.08.16. Material and Method: All the participating children are from 05 months to 13 years age. In this study, information about children's first deciduous tooth eruption, mode of feeding, nutritional status and the family's socioeconomic status is taken from their mother. The data is fed … Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Inherent in child development, the eruption of primary teeth, which can be initiated around 5 months of age, represents a stage of many challenges for parents in view of the possibility of diverse manifestations of local and/or systemic nature . In this phase, the eruption of the different dental groups that make up the temporary dentition, with differences in the time of the eruptive process between sexes…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Inherent in child development, the eruption of primary teeth, which can be initiated around 5 months of age, represents a stage of many challenges for parents in view of the possibility of diverse manifestations of local and/or systemic nature . In this phase, the eruption of the different dental groups that make up the temporary dentition, with differences in the time of the eruptive process between sexes…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, all incisors and the first upper molars erupted significantly earlier in boys in a study conducted in Polish children [ 35 ] and almost all deciduous teeth emerged earlier in boys in Spanish children [ 14 ]. In Pakistan [ 2 ], girls get early deciduous dentition than boys. These two studies evaluated the eruption of each tooth separately.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Logan´s human dental eruption chronology table, modified by McCall and Schour [ 7 ], is still accepted worldwide as a standard for a long time, although its findings were obtained, a long time ago, from the dissection of a few children´s cadavers from a specific population (European) and through a methodology that has not been well described. Other researchers have pointed out that the eruption occurred at least two months later in low-income countries [ 8 15 ], indicating that the origin, ethnicity, among other individual characteristics, can influence the chronology [ 2 , 3 , 13 21 ]. So, these variations should be considered in the development of a new standard for tooth eruption patterns, that cannot be universally applied owing to ethnic variations.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Sin embargo, en esa muestra el primer diente emergió como promedio 3,11 meses después, mientras que el segundo molar apareció como promedio 4,92 meses después en comparación con nuestra serie(Burgueño et al, 2015) A diferencia de nuestros hallazgos se encuentran los obtenidos porMorgado & Herrera (2013) en el municipio Baraguá de la provincia Ciego de Ávila, quienes definieron la edad media de brote de piezas deciduas más tardíamente donde el primer diente en brotar fue el incisivo central superior a los 8,3±1,6 meses(Morgado & Herrera, 2013).En Jordania se estudiaron 1756 niños y niñas, con edades entre 1 y 33 meses (755 mujeres y 1001 hombres). Encontraron que el incisivo central mandibular fue el primer diente en brotar, pero en su caso más temprano (6,3 meses) y el último en emerger fue el segundo molar maxilar (31,5 meses), o sea necesitaron 25,3 meses para completar la dentición temporal, por lo que tuvieron un atraso de 7,6 meses respecto a nuestro estudio que fue de 17,44 meses(Shaweesh & Al-Batayneh,2018) En otro estudio también encontraron en una muestra de 170 niños y niñas (95 hombres y 75 mujeres) que el primer diente en brotar fue el incisivo central mandibular a la edad media de 7,86 meses, sin embargo, en las niñas el proceso fue más temprano (7,5 vs 7,8 meses)(Rathore, et al, 2017).En la India, siguieron un total de 1606 niños y niñas. No se encontraron diferencias significativas entre las hemiarcadas izquierda y la derecha.…”
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