This review article describes different forms of tobacco usage and its direct relationship with the prevalence of dental caries. Smoking along with co-existing factors like old age, bad oral hygiene habits, food habits, limited preventive dental visits and over all health standards, can be associated with high caries incidence. However, a direct etiological relationship is lacking. Environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) causes dental caries in children but no studies have been reported in adults. Existing findings are not sufficient and conclusive enough to confirm that ETS causes dental caries. Oral use of smokeless tobacco (ST), predominantly tobacco chewing, is presumably a positive contributing factor to higher incidence of dental caries. Unfortunately, published studies are not converging towards one single factor through which tobacco usage can have direct relationship to dental caries.
CITATION STYLE
Vellappally, S., Fiala, Z., Šmejkalová, J., Jacob, V., & Shriharsha, P. (2007). Influence of tobacco use in dental caries development. Central European Journal of Public Health, 15(3), 116–121. https://doi.org/10.21101/cejph.a3431
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