2017
DOI: 10.14257/ajmahs.2017.05.04
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The influence of water drinking on oral management behavior and bad breath in college students

Abstract: 남지영 1) , 김혜진 2) , 박선민 3) , 최수현 4) , 정혜인 5) , 김민정 6) , 이민경 7) The influence of water drinking on oral management behavior and bad breath in college students

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Cited by 2 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…In regard to toothbrushing among the oral health behaviors, water intake was high in all groups except for before dinner and before going to bed and was also high in all groups using oral health products except for the use of electric toothbrushes in which water intake was high. This indicates that oral health behavior is good in the group that consumes more water per day, which is consistent with the study of Nam et al [19] that water intake behavior and oral care behavior are related. However, there is no relationship between tongue brushing, the number of brushings, brushing time, and the use of auxiliary oral hygiene products among oral health behaviors; as a result, further research is deemed necessary.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 91%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In regard to toothbrushing among the oral health behaviors, water intake was high in all groups except for before dinner and before going to bed and was also high in all groups using oral health products except for the use of electric toothbrushes in which water intake was high. This indicates that oral health behavior is good in the group that consumes more water per day, which is consistent with the study of Nam et al [19] that water intake behavior and oral care behavior are related. However, there is no relationship between tongue brushing, the number of brushings, brushing time, and the use of auxiliary oral hygiene products among oral health behaviors; as a result, further research is deemed necessary.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 91%
“…Lack of water can cause systemic problems, as well as various health-related symptoms in the oral cavity, such as dry mouth, burning in the mouth due to thirst, or low saliva secretion. If these symptoms persist, it can become an environment that causes oral disease [19]. Saliva is not only necessary to maintain the normal function of oral tissues, but also to suppress oral disease occurrence, and if salivary secretion decreases below normal levels, it can cause oral mucosal diseases and oral diseases.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In regard to toothbrushing among the oral health behaviors, water intake was high in all groups except for before dinner and before going to bed, and in all groups using oral health products except for the use of electric toothbrushes, in which water intake was high. This indicates that oral health behavior is good in the group that consumes a lot of water per day, which is consistent with the study of Nam et al [19] that water intake behavior and oral care behavior are related. However, there is no relationship between tongue brushing, number of brushing, brushing time, and use of auxiliary oral hygiene products among the oral health behaviors.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 91%
“…Lack of water can cause not only systemic problems, but also various health-related symptoms in the oral cavity, such as dry mouth, burning in the mouth due to thirst, or low saliva secretion, unlike ordinary people. If these symptoms persist, it can become an environment that causes oral disease [19].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%