Prevalence and Clinical Effects of Certain Therapy Concepts among Partially Edentulous Serbian Elderly
Само за регистроване кориснике
2015
Чланак у часопису (Објављена верзија)
Метаподаци
Приказ свих података о документуАпстракт
Purpose: This study was conducted to identify the prevalence of partially edentulous individuals in Serbia and to identify prosthodontic treatment used for their rehabilitation as well as to compare prosthodontic treatment concepts among Serbian elderly participants who answered closed-format questionnaires. Materials and Methods: The study was conducted at the Clinic for Dental Prosthetics, University of Belgrade, Military Medical Academy and the Department of Prosthodontics of Home Centre Belgrade; the study consisted of 120 participants. A questionnaire with closed-format questions regarding the influence of applied therapy concepts for participants with Kennedy Class I partial edentulism was created. Statistical software SPSS 11.5 was used for data analysis. Chi-square tests were performed, and p-values were calculated for each parameter. Results: A total of 1081 people were examined; 730 participants were partially edentulous in at least one jaw. Five hundred forty-one participant...s wore Kennedy Class I maxillary or mandibular removable partial dentures (RPDs). Ninety percent of the patients were restored with RPDs; 60% of participants were unrestored, had shortened dental arches, and requested alternative therapeutic solutions. Significantly lower needs for new treatments were identified in participants with fixed dental prostheses (7.5%). Conclusions: Kennedy Class I was the most common type of partial edentulism among Serbian elderly, usually treated with RPDs. Elderly participants with the applied shortened dental arch and RPD therapy concepts requested alternative therapeutic solutions more often than those rehabilitated with fixed partial dentures.
Кључне речи:
Partial edentulism / removable partial denture / cantilever / implantИзвор:
Journal of Prosthodontics-Implant Esthetic & Reconstructive Dentistry, 2015, 24, 8, 610-614Издавач:
- Wiley-Blackwell, Hoboken
DOI: 10.1111/jopr.12261
ISSN: 1059-941X
PubMed: 25594777
WoS: 000367471900002
Scopus: 2-s2.0-84955211912
Колекције
Институција/група
Stomatološki fakultetTY - JOUR AU - Tanasić, Ivan AU - Tihaček-Šojić, Ljiljana AU - Milić-Lemić, Aleksandra PY - 2015 UR - https://smile.stomf.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/2004 AB - Purpose: This study was conducted to identify the prevalence of partially edentulous individuals in Serbia and to identify prosthodontic treatment used for their rehabilitation as well as to compare prosthodontic treatment concepts among Serbian elderly participants who answered closed-format questionnaires. Materials and Methods: The study was conducted at the Clinic for Dental Prosthetics, University of Belgrade, Military Medical Academy and the Department of Prosthodontics of Home Centre Belgrade; the study consisted of 120 participants. A questionnaire with closed-format questions regarding the influence of applied therapy concepts for participants with Kennedy Class I partial edentulism was created. Statistical software SPSS 11.5 was used for data analysis. Chi-square tests were performed, and p-values were calculated for each parameter. Results: A total of 1081 people were examined; 730 participants were partially edentulous in at least one jaw. Five hundred forty-one participants wore Kennedy Class I maxillary or mandibular removable partial dentures (RPDs). Ninety percent of the patients were restored with RPDs; 60% of participants were unrestored, had shortened dental arches, and requested alternative therapeutic solutions. Significantly lower needs for new treatments were identified in participants with fixed dental prostheses (7.5%). Conclusions: Kennedy Class I was the most common type of partial edentulism among Serbian elderly, usually treated with RPDs. Elderly participants with the applied shortened dental arch and RPD therapy concepts requested alternative therapeutic solutions more often than those rehabilitated with fixed partial dentures. PB - Wiley-Blackwell, Hoboken T2 - Journal of Prosthodontics-Implant Esthetic & Reconstructive Dentistry T1 - Prevalence and Clinical Effects of Certain Therapy Concepts among Partially Edentulous Serbian Elderly VL - 24 IS - 8 SP - 610 EP - 614 DO - 10.1111/jopr.12261 ER -
@article{ author = "Tanasić, Ivan and Tihaček-Šojić, Ljiljana and Milić-Lemić, Aleksandra", year = "2015", abstract = "Purpose: This study was conducted to identify the prevalence of partially edentulous individuals in Serbia and to identify prosthodontic treatment used for their rehabilitation as well as to compare prosthodontic treatment concepts among Serbian elderly participants who answered closed-format questionnaires. Materials and Methods: The study was conducted at the Clinic for Dental Prosthetics, University of Belgrade, Military Medical Academy and the Department of Prosthodontics of Home Centre Belgrade; the study consisted of 120 participants. A questionnaire with closed-format questions regarding the influence of applied therapy concepts for participants with Kennedy Class I partial edentulism was created. Statistical software SPSS 11.5 was used for data analysis. Chi-square tests were performed, and p-values were calculated for each parameter. Results: A total of 1081 people were examined; 730 participants were partially edentulous in at least one jaw. Five hundred forty-one participants wore Kennedy Class I maxillary or mandibular removable partial dentures (RPDs). Ninety percent of the patients were restored with RPDs; 60% of participants were unrestored, had shortened dental arches, and requested alternative therapeutic solutions. Significantly lower needs for new treatments were identified in participants with fixed dental prostheses (7.5%). Conclusions: Kennedy Class I was the most common type of partial edentulism among Serbian elderly, usually treated with RPDs. Elderly participants with the applied shortened dental arch and RPD therapy concepts requested alternative therapeutic solutions more often than those rehabilitated with fixed partial dentures.", publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell, Hoboken", journal = "Journal of Prosthodontics-Implant Esthetic & Reconstructive Dentistry", title = "Prevalence and Clinical Effects of Certain Therapy Concepts among Partially Edentulous Serbian Elderly", volume = "24", number = "8", pages = "610-614", doi = "10.1111/jopr.12261" }
Tanasić, I., Tihaček-Šojić, L.,& Milić-Lemić, A.. (2015). Prevalence and Clinical Effects of Certain Therapy Concepts among Partially Edentulous Serbian Elderly. in Journal of Prosthodontics-Implant Esthetic & Reconstructive Dentistry Wiley-Blackwell, Hoboken., 24(8), 610-614. https://doi.org/10.1111/jopr.12261
Tanasić I, Tihaček-Šojić L, Milić-Lemić A. Prevalence and Clinical Effects of Certain Therapy Concepts among Partially Edentulous Serbian Elderly. in Journal of Prosthodontics-Implant Esthetic & Reconstructive Dentistry. 2015;24(8):610-614. doi:10.1111/jopr.12261 .
Tanasić, Ivan, Tihaček-Šojić, Ljiljana, Milić-Lemić, Aleksandra, "Prevalence and Clinical Effects of Certain Therapy Concepts among Partially Edentulous Serbian Elderly" in Journal of Prosthodontics-Implant Esthetic & Reconstructive Dentistry, 24, no. 8 (2015):610-614, https://doi.org/10.1111/jopr.12261 . .