| Literature DB >> 30458845 |
Alexander Zinke1, Christian Hannig2, Hendrik Berth3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Dental Anxiety is still today one of the most common fears and is therefore a great challenge for every dental practitioner. The aim of this study was to identify patients with dental anxiety using the Dental Anxiety Scale and comparing different levels of dental anxiety with oral health using DMF-T and DMF-S index.Entities:
Keywords: Dental anxiety; Medical Psychology; Oral health
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30458845 PMCID: PMC6247764 DOI: 10.1186/s13005-018-0182-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Head Face Med ISSN: 1746-160X Impact factor: 2.151
Different anxiety groups compared to DMF-T values (M, SD, One-way-Anova)
|
| DMF-T global value | Destroyed | Missing | Filled | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low anxiety | 590 | 14.20 (8.23) | 1.34 (2.45) | 4.73 (6.42) | 8.17 (5.61) |
| Moderate anxiety | 243 | 15.02 (7.86) | 1.89 (3.01) | 6.14 (9.83) | 7.44 (5.36) |
| High anxiety | 47 | 15.72 (7.91) | 2.70 (3.24) | 6.13 (6.42) | 6.63 (5.41) |
| One-way ANOVA: |
Different anxiety groups compared to DMF-S values (M, SD, One-way-Anova)
|
| DMF-S global value | Destroyed | Missing | Filled | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low anxiety | 418 | 52.41 (35.33) | 3.16 (5.62) | 18.44 (25.93) | 27.94 (22.03) |
| Moderate anxiety | 157 | 57.48 (35.51) | 4.88 (6.80) | 21.73 (30.45) | 25.83 (19.59) |
| High anxiety | 26 | 67.96 (33.78) | 7.68 (11.86) | 28.80 (31.75) | 25.36 (19.34) |
| One-way ANOVA: |