Occlusal characteristics in groups of Tanzanian and Finnish urban schoolchildren
The occurrence of different occlusal and space anomalies was studied in groups of 642 Tanzanian and 458 Finnish school-children. Similar diagnostic criteria and methods were used in both countries. The Finnish children had significantly higher prevalences of distal occlusion and crowding and a lower prevalence of anterior openbite than the Tanzanian children. The proportion of subjects with no occlusal or space anomalies was considerably higher among the Tanzanians than among the Finns, 55% and 12% to 22%, respectively. The distinct differences found in occlusion of Tanzanian and Finnish children in this study seem to reflect differences in hereditary or environmental factors, which are expressed as craniofacial or dentoalveolar differences between these ethnic groups.Abstract
Contributor Notes
H. Kerosuo is in the Department of Orthodontics, University of Kuopio, Finland
T. Laine is an Acting Professor and Chairman of the Department of Orthodontics, University of Kuopio
V. Nyyssonen is an Acting Professor and Chairman of the Department of Community Dentistry, University of Kuopio
E. Honkala is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Preventive Dentistry, University of Kuopio