
Thumb Sucking, Pacifiers Affect Childs Bite
摘要: Thumb Sucking, Pacifiers Affect Child‘s Bite Breastfeeding Beats Bottle Feeding for Straighter Teeth ByMirandaHitti WebMD Medical News Reviewed ByBrunildaNazario,MD on Wednesday, November 17, 2004 Nov。Pacifiers ......
Thumb Sucking, Pacifiers Affect Child's Bite Breastfeeding Beats Bottle Feeding for Straighter Teeth
Nov. 17, 2004 - Babies who suck their thumbs or use pacifiers are more likely to grow up with crooked teeth. But breastfed babies may be more likely to develop a nicer smile.
Domenico Viggiano, MD, and colleagues studied about 1,000 preschool children aged 3-5 in the southern Italian town of Cava de' Tirreni. The kids had all participated in an oral health study organized by the local school.
Data included how the children were fed during their first three months of life and whether any children had used pacifiers or sucked their thumbs for more than one year, which the researchers call "non-nutritive sucking."
A dentist examined all the children's teeth to flag any flaws in their mouths.
The researchers found that breastfeeding appeared to have a "protective effect" against posterior cross-bite, which occurs when the top back teeth bite inside the bottom back teeth.
Bottle-fed children accounted for 11% of cross-bite cases, compared with 4% of breastfed kids.
Non-nutritive sucking may have exaggerated the problem.
Bottle-fed children who had also sucked their thumbs or used pacifiers made up 13% of posterior cross-bite cases. Five percent of kids with posterior cross-bite were breastfed children who had sucked their thumbs or used pacifiers.
Pacifiers and thumb sucking were linked to two other baby teeth problems.
A third of all participants had malocclusion, meaning the teeth are not lined up properly. Those who had used pacifiers or sucked their thumbs were twice as likely to have malocclusion as those who did not.
In addition, 89% of children with anterior open bite (when the front teeth do not touch) had been thumb suckers or pacifier users, write the researchers in the December issue of the journal Archives of Disease in Childhood.
The type of feeding didn't affect open bite and was less important in malocclusion, say Viggiano and colleagues.
Baby teeth eventually fall out, but it's believed they set the pattern for adult teeth. The different actions required for breastfeeding and bottle use could affect development of the mouth and face, say the researchers.
SOURCES: Viggiano, D. Archives of Disease in Childhood, December 2004; vol 89: pp 1121-1123. News release, BMJ Specialist Journals.
发布日期:2006-8-16
- Dental X-Rays May Warn of Osteoporosis
- Too Young for Gum Disease? Don‘t Count on It
- Flossing Needed to Fight Gum Disease
- Cranberries May Fight Cavities
- The Skinny on Healthy Teeth
- Bad Breath Banishers Battle It Out
- No Harm Found in Amalgam Fillings
- Red Wine May Fight Gum Disease
- Gatorade Tough on Teeth?
- Smoking Makes Root Canals Likelier
- Cranberry Juice Cuts Cavities
- Wisdom Teeth Removal Often Unnecessary
- Thumb Sucking, Pacifiers Affect Childs Bite
- Brush Your Teeth, Help Your Heart
- Good Bacteria Fight Bad Breath, Smelly Feet
- The Skinny on Healthy Teeth
- Oral Piercing Causes Long-Term Dental Damage
- Can Teeth Whitening Become an Addiction?
- Dental X-Rays May Warn of Osteoporosis
- What Your Dentist Knows About Your Health


