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BMC Oral Health | 2014

Cross-cultural validity of a dietary questionnaire for studies of dental caries risk in Japanese.

Chikako Shinga-Ishihara; Yukie Nakai; Peter Milgrom; Kaori Murakami; Michiyo Matsumoto-Nakano

BackgroundDiet is a major modifiable contributing factor in the etiology of dental caries. The purpose of this paper is to examine the reliability and cross-cultural validity of the Japanese version of the Food Frequency Questionnaire to assess dietary intake in relation to dental caries risk in Japanese.MethodsThe 38-item Food Frequency Questionnaire, in which Japanese food items were added to increase content validity, was translated into Japanese, and administered to two samples. The first sample comprised 355 pregnant women with mean age of 29.2 ± 4.2 years for the internal consistency and criterion validity analyses. Factor analysis (principal components with Varimax rotation) was used to determine dimensionality. The dietary cariogenicity score was calculated from the Food Frequency Questionnaire and used for the analyses. Salivary mutans streptococci level was used as a semi-quantitative assessment of dental caries risk and measured by Dentocult SM. Dentocult SM scores were compared with the dietary cariogenicity score computed from the Food Frequency Questionnaire to examine criterion validity, and assessed by Spearman’s correlation coefficient (rs) and Kruskal-Wallis test. Test-retest reliability of the Food Frequency Questionnaire was assessed with a second sample of 25 adults with mean age of 34.0 ± 3.0 years by using the intraclass correlation coefficient analysis.ResultsThe Japanese language version of the Food Frequency Questionnaire showed high test-retest reliability (ICC = 0.70) and good criterion validity assessed by relationship with salivary mutans streptococci levels (rs = 0.22; p < 0.001). Factor analysis revealed four subscales that construct the questionnaire (solid sugars, solid and starchy sugars, liquid and semisolid sugars, sticky and slowly dissolving sugars). Internal consistency were low to acceptable (Cronbach’s alpha = 0.67 for the total scale, 0.46-0.61 for each subscale). Mean dietary cariogenicity scores were 50.8 ± 19.5 in the first sample, 47.4 ± 14.1, and 40.6 ± 11.3 for the first and second administrations in the second sample. The distribution of Dentocult SM score was 6.8% (score = 0), 34.4% (score = 1), 39.4% (score = 2), and 19.4% (score = 3). Participants with higher scores were more likely to have higher dietary cariogenicity scores (p < 0.001; Kruskal-Wallis test).ConclusionsThese results provide the preliminary evidence for the reliability and validity of the Japanese language Food Frequency Questionnaire.


Journal of Dental Research | 2010

Xylitol Gum and Maternal Transmission of Mutans Streptococci

Yukie Nakai; C. Shinga-Ishihara; M. Kaji; K. Moriya; K. Murakami-Yamanaka; M. Takimura

An important caries prevention strategy for children includes measures to interfere with transmission of mutans streptococci (MS). This study confirmed the effectiveness of maternal early exposure to xylitol chewing gum on mother-child transmission of MS. After screening, 107 pregnant women with high salivary MS were randomized into two groups: xylitol gum (Xylitol; n = 56) and no gum (Control; n = 51) groups. Maternal chewing started at the sixth month of pregnancy and terminated 13 months later in the Xylitol group. Outcome measures were the presence of MS in saliva or plaque of the children until age 24 months. The Xylitol-group children were significantly less likely to show MS colonization than Control-group children aged 9–24 months. The Control-group children acquired MS 8.8 months earlier than those in the Xylitol group, suggesting that maternal xylitol gum chewing in Japan shows beneficial effects similar to those demonstrated in Nordic countries.


Advances in Dental Research | 2012

Clinical Evidence for Polyol Efficacy

Peter Milgrom; Eva Söderling; Suchitra Nelson; Donald L. Chi; Yukie Nakai

Xylitol is a safe dental caries preventive when incorporated into chewing gum or confections used habitually. The goal of this paper is to identify and assess the work on xylitol and other polyols and dental caries since 2008. Xylitol is effective when used by the mother prenatally or after delivery to prevent mutans transmission and subsequent dental caries in the offspring. One new completed trial confirmed that children of mothers who used xylitol lozenges after delivery had less dental caries than a comparison group. A similar study confirmed that the use of xylitol gum by the mother either prevented or postponed MS transmission to the offspring. Xylitol use among schoolchildren delivered via a gummy bear confection reduced S. mutans levels, but a once per day use of xylitol-containing toothpaste did not. Randomized trials, with caries outcomes, assessing xylitol-containing lozenges in adults and xylitol-containing gummy bears in children will release results in the coming year. Other studies are ongoing but are not systematic and will fail to answer important questions about how xylitol, or other polyols, can address the global dental caries problem.


BMC Oral Health | 2009

Reliability and cross-cultural validity of a Japanese version of the Dental Fear Survey

Toshiko Yoshida; Peter Milgrom; Yukako Mori; Yukie Nakai; Mari Kaji; Tsutomu Shimono; Ana Nora A Donaldson

BackgroundThis study established the reliability and cross-cultural validity of a Japanese version of the Dental Fear Survey (DFS).MethodsTwo studies were carried out in separate populations. The first involved 166 Japanese dental and nursing students and assessed internal consistency and test-retest reliability. The second involved 2,095 Japanese parents or guardians of school children and tested the hypothesis that the conceptual structure of the Japanese translation was consistent with the U.S. version using Structural Equation Modeling (SEM).ResultsIn the first study Cronbach alpha ranged from .94 to .96 and test-retest reliability (Spearman correlation) ranged from .89 to .92. The intra-class correlation coefficients (ICC) was 0.919 (95%CI: 0.892 – 0.940). In the second study SEM was used on the covariance matrix of the 20 questions in a random sample of 600 questionnaires to evaluate the goodness of fit of the theoretical model; and then, in an exploratory manner corrected for specification errors until a model that fit the data well was achieved.ConclusionThe Japanese version of the DFS appears reliable and demonstrates cross-cultural validity. The modeling confirms the three factors on which the English language version was based.


Caries Research | 2012

Xylitol carryover effects on salivary mutans streptococci after 13 months of chewing xylitol gum.

C. Shinga-Ishihara; Yukie Nakai; Peter Milgrom; Eva Söderling; Mimmi Tolvanen; K. Murakami

To assess mutans streptococci (MS) during xylitol gum chewing (mean 3.8 g/day, 2.9 times/day) for 13 months and then for 15 months after the intervention, Japanese mothers with high salivary MS were randomized into two groups: xylitol gum (n = 56) and no gum (n = 51). The proportion of low MS levels was highest at 3 months of consumption (48.8%), but was significantly lower compared to baseline at the end of the intervention (p < 0.001). MS levels did not change during the postintervention period. The data suggest that in the xylitol group 23.3% showed persistent carryover effects by xylitol gum chewing in the postintervention period.


Pediatric Dental Journal | 2005

Risk behaviors and their association with presence of S.mutans or S.sobrinus and caries activity in 18-month-old Japanese children

Ying Ji; Omar M.M. Rodis; Masahiko Hori; Yukie Nakai; Naoyuki Kariya; Seishi Matsumura; Tsutomu Shimono

Abstract The purpose of this study was to investigate risk behaviors associated with the presence of S. mutans or S. sobrinus and caries activity. The subjects were 448 mother-child pairs who underwent dental health examinations between February 2004 and November 2004 when the children were 18 months old. Caries activity was assessed by the Cariostat test. The presence of S. mutans and S. sobrinus was detected using PCR techniques. Questionnaires regarding risk behaviors were completed by the mothers. A statistically significant correlation was found for the detection of S. mutans and/or S. sobrinus in children and mothers ( P P P P P P P P P


Pediatric Dental Journal | 2005

Relationship between caries risk and presence of cariogenic bacteria among Japanese pregnant women

Ying Ji; Yukie Nakai; Omar M.M. Rodis; Naoyuki Kariya; Seishi Matsumura; Tsutomu Shimono

Abstract Objectives To analyze the relationship between caries risk and the presence of S. mutans and S. sobrinus from plaques of pregnant women using the Cariostat method and the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) technique. Materials and Methods The subjects consisted of 269 pregnant women who were in their 3rd, 4th or 5th month of pregnancy. The presence of S. mutans and S. sobrinus was assessed from their plaques cultured in the Cariostat medium and assessed by PCR. Results The correlation between caries risk scores assessed by the Cariostat method and the presence of S. mutans was statistically significant ( P S. sobrinus and caries activity. Conclusion This study suggested that pregnant women who have high caries activity should be more aware of the possibility of transmission of cariogenic bacteria to their infants.


BMC Medical Research Methodology | 2005

Evaluation of the Total Design Method in a survey of Japanese dentists

Yukie Nakai; Peter Milgrom; Toshiko Yoshida; Chikako Ishihara; Tsutomu Shimono

BackgroundThis study assessed the application of the Total Design Method (TDM) in a mail survey of Japanese dentists. The TDM was chosen because survey response rates in Japan are unacceptably low and the TDM had previously been used in a general population survey.MethodsFour hundred and seventy eight dentist members of the Okayama Medical and Dental Practitioners Association were surveyed. The nine-page, 27-item questionnaire covered dentist job satisfaction, physical practice, and dentist and patient characteristics. Respondents to the first mailing or the one-week follow-up postcard were defined as early responders; others who responded were late responders. Responder bias was assessed by examining age, gender and training.ResultsThe overall response rate was 46.7% (223/478). The response rates by follow-up mailing were, 18% after the first mailing, 35.4% after the follow-up postcard, 42.3% after the second mailing, and 46.7% after the third mailing. Respondents did not differ from non-respondents in age or gender, nor were there differences between early and late responders.ConclusionThe application of TDM in this survey of Japanese dentists produced lower rates of response than expected from previous Japanese and US studies.


Journal of the American Dental Association | 2000

EFFECTIVENESS OF LOCAL ANESTHESIA IN PEDIATRIC DENTAL PRACTICE

Yukie Nakai; Peter Milgrom; Lloyd Mancl; Susan E. Coldwell; Peter K. Domoto; Douglas S. Ramsay


Community Dentistry and Oral Epidemiology | 2005

The children's fear survey schedule-dental subscale in Japan

Yukie Nakai; Takayuki Hirakawa; Peter Milgrom; Trilby Coolidge; Masahiro Heima; Yukako Mori; Chikako Ishihara; Noriko Yakushiji; Toshiko Yoshida; Tsutomu Shimono

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Peter Milgrom

University of Washington

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