2019
DOI: 10.1007/s40368-019-00465-1
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What children say and clinicians hear: accounts relating to incisor hypomineralisation of cosmetic concern

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Cited by 8 publications
(6 citation statements)
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References 26 publications
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“…Treatment evaluation Hasmun et al ( 2018 ) Change in Oral Health-Related Quality of Life Following Minimally Invasive Aesthetic Treatment for Children with Molar Incisor Hypomineralization: A Prospective Study OHRQoL vs MIH not measured. Treatment evaluation Kalkani et al ( 2016 ) Molar incisor hypomineralization: experience and perceived challenges among dentists specialising in paediatric dentistry and a group of general dental practitioners in the UK Evaluation of dentist perception Large et al ( 2020 ) What children say and clinicians hear: accounts relating to incisor hypomineralization of cosmetic concern Estetic evaluation Marshman et al ( 2009 ) The impact of developmental defects of enamel on young people in the UK No MIH diagnosis. Qualitative study, no questionnaire Oyedele et al ( 2015 ) Co-morbidities associated with molar-incisor hypomineralization in 8 to 16 year old pupils in Ile-Ife, Nigeria No validated QoL questionnaire Paglia ( 2018 ) Molar Incisor Hypomineralization: paediatricians should be involved as well!…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Treatment evaluation Hasmun et al ( 2018 ) Change in Oral Health-Related Quality of Life Following Minimally Invasive Aesthetic Treatment for Children with Molar Incisor Hypomineralization: A Prospective Study OHRQoL vs MIH not measured. Treatment evaluation Kalkani et al ( 2016 ) Molar incisor hypomineralization: experience and perceived challenges among dentists specialising in paediatric dentistry and a group of general dental practitioners in the UK Evaluation of dentist perception Large et al ( 2020 ) What children say and clinicians hear: accounts relating to incisor hypomineralization of cosmetic concern Estetic evaluation Marshman et al ( 2009 ) The impact of developmental defects of enamel on young people in the UK No MIH diagnosis. Qualitative study, no questionnaire Oyedele et al ( 2015 ) Co-morbidities associated with molar-incisor hypomineralization in 8 to 16 year old pupils in Ile-Ife, Nigeria No validated QoL questionnaire Paglia ( 2018 ) Molar Incisor Hypomineralization: paediatricians should be involved as well!…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Identifying the occurrence of oral problems as early as possible helps reduce their impact on children's quality of life [1]. Therefore, it is a challenge for dentists not only to early diagnose and adequately manage enamel defects in pediatric patients, but also to become aware of the impacts of this type of enamel defect on their quality of life [8,40], avoiding the perpetuation and worsening of its symptoms and consequences with advancing age.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There was no difference in aesthetic satisfaction between mild and severe MIH, probably because severe MIH-characterised by post-eruptive fractures and atypical restorations-was more frequent in the posterior teeth (Jeremias et al 2013a, b), and thus was not easily visible to children. There were no epidemiological reports in the literature about the aesthetic satisfaction of children in regard to MIH lesions; however, some studies suggest a significant improvement in aesthetics satisfaction in patients with MIH undergoing minimally invasive treatments (Rodd et al 2011;Hasmun et al 2018;Large et al 2019). Other enamel defects that may also manifest colour alterations have also been found not to be aesthetically accepted.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Reports in the literature describe several factors that influence the aesthetic perception of children and adolescents, including use of orthodontic appliances (Feu et al 2012) and metal crowns (Bell et al 2010), occurrence of trauma (Fakhruddin et al 2008), absence of anterior teeth (Robertsson et al 2010), changes in occlusion (Lombardo et al 2011), dental fluorosis (Tellez et al 2012) and enamel changes (Sujak et al 2004;Marshman et al 2009). Regarding MIH, some studies suggest a significant improvement in OHRQoL and aesthetic satisfaction in patients with MIH undergoing minimally invasive treatments in the demarcated opacities of incisor teeth (Rodd et al 2011;Large et al 2019;Hasmun et al 2018). A case-control study showed that both children and their parents perceive and care about the opacities of MIH, and associate it with an oral health problem (Leal et al 2017).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%