Knowledge and Opinions of French Dental Students Toward Occlusal and Proximal Restorative Thresholds.

carious lesions dental education dental students minimal intervention restorative threshold

Journal

Oral health & preventive dentistry
ISSN: 1757-9996
Titre abrégé: Oral Health Prev Dent
Pays: Germany
ID NLM: 101167768

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
07 Jan 2021
Historique:
entrez: 14 7 2021
pubmed: 15 7 2021
medline: 17 7 2021
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

To investigate the practices, knowledge and opinions of French dental students (FDSs) in various domains of minimal intervention (MI) in cariology. A cross-sectional, questionnaire-based study was conducted in spring 2018 among all fifth-year French dental students (FDSs) from the 16 French dental schools. The present article focuses on restorative management. Statistical analyses (descriptive, chi-squared) were performed. The response rate was 84.5%. Overall, 97.4% of respondents would have operatively intervened for proximal and 83% for occlusal carious lesions, respectively, while non-or micro-invasive intervention would have been possible. Interestingly, 15% would completely open the occlusal fissures. For both occlusal and proximal lesions requiring a restoration, composite resin was indicated by over 95% of the respondents. In a clinical case, 51.6% of FDSs who rightly diagnosed an enamel carious lesion would operatively intervene. When FDSs could not diagnose the type of carious lesions, a high proportion of invasive actions were also reported (40%). FDSs who read scientific articles were more likely to consider the high importance of not filling sound teeth unnecessarily (p = 0.033). FDSs do not have sufficient awareness of MI guidelines regarding occlusal and proximal restorative thresholds. Efforts are required in dental schools to teach FDSs to postpone invasive/restorative strategies to later stages of carious progression. There is a need to strengthen prevention techniques and non-invasive options in the teaching of MI in cariology.

Identifiants

pubmed: 34259431
pii: 1749707
doi: 10.3290/j.ohpd.b1749707
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

383-389

Auteurs

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Classifications MeSH