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Featured researches published by Marc W. Heft.


Pain | 2002

Gender role expectations of pain: relationship to experimental pain perception.

Emily A. Wise; Donald D. Price; Cynthia D. Myers; Marc W. Heft

&NA; The primary purpose of this study was to investigate the influence of an individuals Gender Role Expectations of Pain (GREP) on experimental pain report. One hundred and forty‐eight subjects (87 females and 61 males) subjects underwent thermal testing and were asked to report pain threshold, pain tolerance, VAS ratings of pain intensity and unpleasantness, and a computerized visual analogue scales (VAS) rating of pain intensity during the procedure. Subjects completed the GREP questionnaire to assess sex‐related stereotypic attributions of pain sensitivity, pain endurance, and willingness to report pain. Consistent with previous research, significant sex differences emerged for measures of pain threshold, pain tolerance, and pain unpleasantness. After statistically controlling for age, GREP scores were significant predictors of threshold, tolerance, and pain unpleasantness, accounting for an additional 7, 11, and 21% of the variance, respectively. Sex remained a significant predictor of pain tolerance in hierarchical regression analyses after controlling for GREP scores. Results provide support for two competing but not mutually exclusive hypotheses related to the sex differences in experimental pain. Both psychosocial factors and first‐order, biological sex differences remain as viable explanations for differences in experimental pain report between the sexes. It appears that GREP do play a part in determining an individuals pain report and may be contributing to the sex differences in the laboratory setting.


Medical Care | 1997

Dental health attitudes among dentate black and white adults.

Gregg H. Gilbert; Duncan Rp; Marc W. Heft; Raymond T. Coward

OBJECTIVES Blacks and poor persons share a greater burden of oral disease and are less likely to seek dental care on a regular basis. The role of dental attitudes and knowledge of services on this circumstance is unclear. The authors quantified group differences in dental attitudes and knowledge of services and related them to regularity of dental care use. METHODS As part of the baseline phase of The Florida Dental Care Study, a longitudinal study of oral health, 873 respondents who had at least one tooth and who were 45 years or older participated for an interview and a clinical dental examination. Dental care use, seven dental attitudinal constructs, and knowledge of dental services were queried. RESULTS Forty-five percent of respondents reported going to a dentist only when they have a problem, and 17% of respondents had not seen a dentist in more than 5 years. Ten percent of respondents reported that they had at least one permanent tooth removed by someone other than a dentist (typically, the respondent himself). Blacks and poor persons had more negative attitudes toward dental care and dental health and were less knowledgeable of dental services. Multivariate analyses suggested that dental attitudes were important to understanding the use of dental care services for this diverse group of adults, and that race and poverty contributed independently to dental care use even with dental attitudes taken into account. CONCLUSIONS Dental attitudes contribute to race and poverty differences in dental care use among adults. The persistence of race and poverty effects with attitudes taken into account suggests that additional explanatory factors contribute as well. These differences may contribute to more prevalent and severe oral health decrements among the same adults who also are more likely to suffer from other health decrements.


Pain | 1998

Orofacial pain symptom prevalence: selective sex differences in the elderly?

Joseph L. Riley; Gregg H. Gilbert; Marc W. Heft

&NA; This study investigated sex differences in orofacial pain symptoms in a sample of elderly adults. Furthermore, differences across sex were tested on symptom continuity, overall duration, pain severity, activity reduction, and health care utilization, related to each specific symptom. Telephone interviews were conducted with a stratified random sample of community dwelling older (65+) north Floridians. A total of 5860 households were contacted and screened, with 75.3% participating to the point where their eligibility for the study could be determined. Of the remaining households, 1636 completed the interview. Of the total sample, 17.4% reported experiencing at least one of the four target orofacial pain symptoms (jaw joint pain, face pain, oral sores, burning mouth) during the past year, suggesting that orofacial pain symptoms are common in older adults. Our findings for prevalence of each specific symptom (jaw joint pain, 7.7%; face pain, 6.9%; oral sores, 6.4%; toothache, 12.0%; burning mouth, 1.7%) are similar to those estimated by the 1989 National Health Interview Survey, for the US adult population. Consistent with other epidemiological and clinical studies, we found that females were more likely to report jaw joint pain and face pain than males. In contrast to clinical studies, no differences were found on subjective ratings of pain severity, for any symptom. Differences across sex were most likely to be reported for jaw joint pain related variables, suggesting undetermined sex‐uniqueness for these symptoms. In contrast to previous studies, older females tended to report lower levels of health care utilization than older males. This is the first study to our knowledge that reports orofacial symptom‐specific sex differences among the elderly.


Journal of Dental Research | 2010

Age Differences in Orofacial Sensory Thresholds

Marc W. Heft

Declines in sensory functioning with aging are evident for many of the senses. In the present study, thresholds were determined for somatosensory (warming and cooling temperature, pain, touch, and two-point discrimination) and taste stimuli in 178 healthy individuals aged 20-89 yrs. Somatosensory stimuli were applied to the upper lip (glabrous skin) and the chin (hairy skin). The sample was divided into two groups, based on a bimodal split “< 45 yrs” and “≥ 65 yrs”. In all instances, there were elevations in thresholds for the older individuals. Further, males were less sensitive than females for cool at the chin site, for touch, and for sour taste. We conclude that there are elevations in sensory thresholds with age for multimodal somatosensory and gustatory senses.


Health Services Research | 2002

Racial Differences in Predictors of Dental Care Use

Gregg H. Gilbert; Ging R Shah; Brent J. Shelton; Marc W. Heft; Edward H. Bradford; L. Scott Chavers

OBJECTIVE To test five hypotheses that non-Hispanic African Americans (AAs) and non-Hispanic whites (NHWs) differ in responsiveness to new dental symptoms by seeking dental care, and differ in certain predictors of dental care utilization. DATA SOURCES/STUDY SETTING Florida Dental Care Study, comprising AAs and NHWs 45 years old or older, who had at least one tooth, and who lived in north Florida. STUDY DESIGN We used a prospective cohort design. The key outcome of interest was whether dental care was received in a given six-month period, after adjusting for the presence of certain time-varying and fixed characteristics. DATA COLLECTION/EXTRACTION METHODS In-person interviews were conducted at baseline and 24 months after baseline, with six-monthly telephone interviews in between. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS African Americans were less likely to seek dental care during follow-up, with or without adjusting for key predisposing, enabling, and oral health need characteristics. African Americans were more likely to be problem-oriented dental attenders, to be unable to pay an unexpected


Pain | 1999

Health care utilization by older adults in response to painful orofacial symptoms

Joseph L. Riley; Gregg H. Gilbert; Marc W. Heft

500 dental bill, and to report postbaseline dental problems. However, the effect of certain postbaseline dental signs and symptoms on postbaseline dental care use differed between AAs and NHWs. Although financial circumstance was predictive for both groups, it was more salient for NHWs in separate NHW and AA regressions. Frustration with past dental care, propensity to use a homemade remedy, and dental insurance were significant predictors among AAs, but not among NHWs. The NHWs were much more likely to have sought care for preventive reasons. CONCLUSIONS Racial differences in responsiveness to new dental symptoms by seeking dental care were evident, as were differences in other predictors of dental care utilization. These differences may contribute to racial disparities in oral health.


Aging Clinical and Experimental Research | 1996

Aging effects on the perception of noxious and non-noxious thermal stimuli applied to the face

Marc W. Heft; Cooper By; O'Brien Kk; Hemp E; O'Brien R

The purpose of this study was to determine which specific attributes of painful orofacial symptoms serve as predictors of health care utilization in a population based sample of elderly subjects. Furthermore, we documented patterns of health care utilization selection by type of health care provider. To our knowledge, these specific utilization patterns have never before been reported in the pain literature. Telephone interviews were conducted with a stratified random sample of 1636 community dwelling older (65+) north Floridians. A total of 5860 households were contacted and screened, with 75.3% participating to the point where their eligibility for the study could be determined. The percentage of subjects reporting health care utilization for a specific symptom ranged from 62 to 32%. One or more health care visits were reported by at least 50% of those reporting symptoms of toothache pain, facial pain, jaw joint pain and burning mouth in the past 12 months. These rates suggest that elderly individuals are willing and able to seek health care for painful orofacial symptoms. We found that pain intensity was the best predictor of whether an elderly individual utilized health care or not, which suggests that some pain intensity threshold may exist at which health care seeking behavior is initiated. The overall number of visits was not predicted by pain intensity but by other qualities more associated with time or level of dysfunction caused by the symptom. We also found that elderly adults, typically seek care for toothache from a dentist and from physicians for painful orofacial symptoms not associated with the teeth or mouth. These decisions regarding the selection of a health care professional may, in part, be a function of financial and insurance considerations, anatomical site and perception of the role of dentistry in orofacial care.


Oral Surgery Oral Medicine Oral Pathology Oral Radiology and Endodontology | 2003

Periradicular radiographic assessment in diabetic and control individuals

Leandro R. Britto; Joseph Katz; Marcio Guelmann; Marc W. Heft

While age-related sensory deficits have been demonstrated for the senses of vision, audition, and the chemical senses, reports have differed with regard to changes in painful and non-painful thermal sensation. One hundred and seventy-nine healthy, community-dwelling individuals aged 20–89 years rated threshold and suprathreshold warming, cooling, and painful stimuli delivered to glabrous (upper lip) and hairy (chin) sites of the face in three separate testing sessions. Threshold measures were determined by the Method of Limits. Suprathreshold stimuli were assessed by a cross-modality matching procedure and a Pooled Adjacent Violators Algorithm-based analysis. The analyses of the effect of age on the threshold and suprathreshold measures of sensory performance yielded disparate findings. There are modest changes in warming and cooling perception with increased age, but pain perception is relatively unaffected. There is a slight diminution in threshold and suprathreshold thermal performance with increasing aging.


Caries Research | 1996

Coronal Caries, Root Fragments, and Restoration and Cusp Fractures in US Adults

Gregg H. Gilbert; Donald E. Antonson; I.A. Mjör; Melvin L. Ringelberg; Teresa A. Dolan; Ulrich Foerster; D.W. Legler; Marc W. Heft; Duncan Rp

OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to investigate the prevalence of radiographic periradicular radiolucencies in endodontically treated and untreated teeth in patients with and without diabetes. STUDY DESIGN The records of 30 subjects with diabetes and 23 control subjects attending the Endodontic Graduate Clinic at the University of Florida, Gainesville, were reviewed. The number of teeth with root canal treatments with and without periradicular radiolucencies and the number of teeth without endodontic treatment but with periradicular lesions were recorded. RESULTS There were no main effects of sex, diabetes diagnosis, or age (the covariate) on the 3 outcomes of interest- nonsurgical endodontic treatment (NSE) with lesions, NSE without lesions, and no NSE with lesions. However, there were significant interactions between sex and diabetes diagnosis for both of the endodontic outcomes, NSE with lesions (F = 4.292; P <.05) and NSE without lesions (F = 4.241; P <.05). This meant that men with type 2 diabetes who had endodontic treatments were more likely to have residual lesions after treatment. CONCLUSION Type 2 diabetes is associated with an increased risk of ill response by the periradicular tissues to odontogenic pathogens.


Medical Care | 1999

Patterns of change in self-reported oral health among dentate adults.

Chuck W. Peek; Gregg H. Gilbert; Duncan Rp; Marc W. Heft; John C. Henretta

The Florida Dental Care Study is a longitudinal study of changes in oral health that included at baseline 873 subjects (Ss) who had at least 1 tooth, were 45 years or older, and participated for an interview and examination. Forty-five percent of Ss had active coronal caries; 94% of the coronal carious surfaces were primary decay, and only 6% were secondary/recurrent. Ten percent of Ss had 1 or more root fragments, 16% of Ss had 1 or more teeth with restoration fractures, and 14% of Ss had 1 or more teeth with cusp fractures. Blacks, poor persons, and irregular attenders had more caries, root fragments, and cusp fractures, even though they had significantly fewer teeth. Blacks, poor persons, and irregular attenders were not at increased risk for restoration fractures, probably because fractures were associated with dental care use. These findings regarding caries and restorative treatment needs are consistent with a substantial burden in adult high-risk groups, and are relevant for dental primary health care policy.

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Gregg H. Gilbert

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Duncan Rp

University of Florida

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