This study compared fluorosis in the upper central incisors of children from socially diverse backgrounds who had received either 440- or 1,450-ppm F toothpaste from 12 months of age. The children were resident in non-fluoridated districts in the north-west of England. They received either 440- or 1,450-ppm F toothpaste and advice regarding its use until the age of 5–6 years. Dental fluorosis (TF index) was assessed on digital images of dried teeth when the children (n = 1,268) were 8–10 years old. In the less deprived districts the prevalences of fluorosis (TF ≧0) for the 1,450- and 440-ppm F groups were 34.5 and 23.7% (p = 0.006). In the deprived districts the prevalences of fluorosis were 25.2 and 19.5% (p = 0.2). Overall the prevalences of TF ≧2 were 7 and 2.1% for the 1,450- and 440-ppm F groups and 2.2 and 0.2% for TF ≧3. These differences were statistically significant (p < 0.003). There was a strong association between the deprivation status of wards and fluorosis. Only 1 subject with a TF score of 3 was identified in the two most deprived quintiles of the Townsend score. It is concluded that careful targeting of programmes of this type to children living in high caries risk deprived communities carries only a small risk of aesthetically objectionable fluorosis (TF >2) whether low or high fluoride toothpastes are used. High fluoride (1,450 ppm F) toothpastes should not be provided on a community basis to very young children in less deprived communities.
Fluorescence imaging hardware and software have been recently employed to assess demineralization due to early dental caries. Dental fluorosis also presents as diffuse surface hypomineralization of enamel and in principle similar measurement methods might be applicable to both. The caries analysis system requires the user to select an area of sound enamel around the lesion so that the affected surface can be reconstructed and the lesion subtracted. Whereas early caries presents as discrete isolated lesions fluorosis is characterized by diffuse opacities covering most of the tooth. Consequently it is difficult to use commercial QLF software for the assessment of fluorosis, as there is typically no sound area of enamel to use for reconstruction. This study describes a fluorescent imaging device capable of recording digital images of the anterior teeth and also software that is able to objectively measure fluorosis area and severity. A convenience sample of 26 subjects with a range of fluorosis from TF scores 0–3 took part in the study. The upper left central incisor of these subjects was scored for fluorosis using the TF index, photographed using a conventional digital camera and imaged using the fluorescence imaging device. The TF index was then used to visually score the digital photographs and the fluorescence images. The data from the fluorescence method demonstrated a strong correlation with TF scores from fluorescence images (Kendall’s tau = 0.862). The fluorescence imaging method shows promise as an objective, potentially blinded system for the longitudinal assessment of enamel fluorosis in vivo.
TF3 level of fluorosis represented the break point at which enamel fluorosis became aesthetically objectionable to these participants. Low grades of fluorosis (TF1 and TF2) were rated similarly to the photograph depicting no fluorosis (TF0).
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