Association between malocclusion, tongue position and speech distortion in mixed-dentition schoolchildren: an epidemiological study

Abstract Background Malocclusions are highly prevalent in childhood and adolescence, being considered a public health problem worldwide, in addition to be considered an important predictor in the tongue position and speech disorders. Objective Evaluate the association of malocclusions with tongue position and speech distortion in mixed-dentition schoolchildren from the south of Brazil. Methodology This cross-sectional study was performed using a database of an epidemiological survey realized in the southern of Brazil, in 2015, for evaluating the dental and myofunctional condition of the mixed-dentition from 7-13 years’ schoolchildren. The outcome variables were tongue position and speech distortion, evaluated by a trained and calibrated examiner. Characteristics regarding sociodemographic and oral health measures (Angle’s classification of the malocclusion, overjet, overbite, posterior crossbite and respiratory mode) were also assessed. Poisson regression models with adjusted robust variance were used to evaluate the association among predictors variables in the outcomes. Results are presented as prevalence ratio (PR) and 95% confidence interval (95% CI). Results A total of 547 children were evaluated. Schoolchildren who presented anterior open bite (PR 2.36 95%CI 1.59-3.49) and having oral/oral-nasal breathing (RP 2.51 95%CI 1.70-3.71) are more likely to have altered position of the tongue. Both deep bite and being male represent protection factors for the abnormal tongue position. Regarding speech distortion, deep overbite presents a protective relationship to speech distortion (PR 0.41; 95%CI 0.24-0.71), whereas schoolchildren with posterior crossbite were more likely to present this problem (PR 1.77; 95%CI 1.09-2.88). Conclusion Anterior open bite and posterior crossbite were the malocclusions related to speech distortion and/or altered tongue position. Oral/oral-nasal breathing was also related to myofunctional changes. Deep bite malocclusion was a protective factor for both speech problems and altered tongue position when compared to a normal overbite.

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Main Authors: ASSAF,Débora do Canto, KNORST,Jessica Klöckner, BUSANELLO-STELLA,Angela Ruviaro, FERRAZZO,Vilmar Antônio, BERWIG,Luana Cristina, ARDENGHI,Thiago Machado, MARQUEZAN,Mariana
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Faculdade De Odontologia De Bauru - USP 2021
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1678-77572021000100433
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spelling oai:scielo:S1678-775720210001004332021-08-13Association between malocclusion, tongue position and speech distortion in mixed-dentition schoolchildren: an epidemiological studyASSAF,Débora do CantoKNORST,Jessica KlöcknerBUSANELLO-STELLA,Angela RuviaroFERRAZZO,Vilmar AntônioBERWIG,Luana CristinaARDENGHI,Thiago MachadoMARQUEZAN,Mariana Mixed dentition Malocclusion Orthodontics Observational study Speech-language pathologist Speech therapy Abstract Background Malocclusions are highly prevalent in childhood and adolescence, being considered a public health problem worldwide, in addition to be considered an important predictor in the tongue position and speech disorders. Objective Evaluate the association of malocclusions with tongue position and speech distortion in mixed-dentition schoolchildren from the south of Brazil. Methodology This cross-sectional study was performed using a database of an epidemiological survey realized in the southern of Brazil, in 2015, for evaluating the dental and myofunctional condition of the mixed-dentition from 7-13 years’ schoolchildren. The outcome variables were tongue position and speech distortion, evaluated by a trained and calibrated examiner. Characteristics regarding sociodemographic and oral health measures (Angle’s classification of the malocclusion, overjet, overbite, posterior crossbite and respiratory mode) were also assessed. Poisson regression models with adjusted robust variance were used to evaluate the association among predictors variables in the outcomes. Results are presented as prevalence ratio (PR) and 95% confidence interval (95% CI). Results A total of 547 children were evaluated. Schoolchildren who presented anterior open bite (PR 2.36 95%CI 1.59-3.49) and having oral/oral-nasal breathing (RP 2.51 95%CI 1.70-3.71) are more likely to have altered position of the tongue. Both deep bite and being male represent protection factors for the abnormal tongue position. Regarding speech distortion, deep overbite presents a protective relationship to speech distortion (PR 0.41; 95%CI 0.24-0.71), whereas schoolchildren with posterior crossbite were more likely to present this problem (PR 1.77; 95%CI 1.09-2.88). Conclusion Anterior open bite and posterior crossbite were the malocclusions related to speech distortion and/or altered tongue position. Oral/oral-nasal breathing was also related to myofunctional changes. Deep bite malocclusion was a protective factor for both speech problems and altered tongue position when compared to a normal overbite.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessFaculdade De Odontologia De Bauru - USPJournal of Applied Oral Science v.29 20212021-01-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1678-77572021000100433en10.1590/1678-7757-2020-1005
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language English
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author ASSAF,Débora do Canto
KNORST,Jessica Klöckner
BUSANELLO-STELLA,Angela Ruviaro
FERRAZZO,Vilmar Antônio
BERWIG,Luana Cristina
ARDENGHI,Thiago Machado
MARQUEZAN,Mariana
spellingShingle ASSAF,Débora do Canto
KNORST,Jessica Klöckner
BUSANELLO-STELLA,Angela Ruviaro
FERRAZZO,Vilmar Antônio
BERWIG,Luana Cristina
ARDENGHI,Thiago Machado
MARQUEZAN,Mariana
Association between malocclusion, tongue position and speech distortion in mixed-dentition schoolchildren: an epidemiological study
author_facet ASSAF,Débora do Canto
KNORST,Jessica Klöckner
BUSANELLO-STELLA,Angela Ruviaro
FERRAZZO,Vilmar Antônio
BERWIG,Luana Cristina
ARDENGHI,Thiago Machado
MARQUEZAN,Mariana
author_sort ASSAF,Débora do Canto
title Association between malocclusion, tongue position and speech distortion in mixed-dentition schoolchildren: an epidemiological study
title_short Association between malocclusion, tongue position and speech distortion in mixed-dentition schoolchildren: an epidemiological study
title_full Association between malocclusion, tongue position and speech distortion in mixed-dentition schoolchildren: an epidemiological study
title_fullStr Association between malocclusion, tongue position and speech distortion in mixed-dentition schoolchildren: an epidemiological study
title_full_unstemmed Association between malocclusion, tongue position and speech distortion in mixed-dentition schoolchildren: an epidemiological study
title_sort association between malocclusion, tongue position and speech distortion in mixed-dentition schoolchildren: an epidemiological study
description Abstract Background Malocclusions are highly prevalent in childhood and adolescence, being considered a public health problem worldwide, in addition to be considered an important predictor in the tongue position and speech disorders. Objective Evaluate the association of malocclusions with tongue position and speech distortion in mixed-dentition schoolchildren from the south of Brazil. Methodology This cross-sectional study was performed using a database of an epidemiological survey realized in the southern of Brazil, in 2015, for evaluating the dental and myofunctional condition of the mixed-dentition from 7-13 years’ schoolchildren. The outcome variables were tongue position and speech distortion, evaluated by a trained and calibrated examiner. Characteristics regarding sociodemographic and oral health measures (Angle’s classification of the malocclusion, overjet, overbite, posterior crossbite and respiratory mode) were also assessed. Poisson regression models with adjusted robust variance were used to evaluate the association among predictors variables in the outcomes. Results are presented as prevalence ratio (PR) and 95% confidence interval (95% CI). Results A total of 547 children were evaluated. Schoolchildren who presented anterior open bite (PR 2.36 95%CI 1.59-3.49) and having oral/oral-nasal breathing (RP 2.51 95%CI 1.70-3.71) are more likely to have altered position of the tongue. Both deep bite and being male represent protection factors for the abnormal tongue position. Regarding speech distortion, deep overbite presents a protective relationship to speech distortion (PR 0.41; 95%CI 0.24-0.71), whereas schoolchildren with posterior crossbite were more likely to present this problem (PR 1.77; 95%CI 1.09-2.88). Conclusion Anterior open bite and posterior crossbite were the malocclusions related to speech distortion and/or altered tongue position. Oral/oral-nasal breathing was also related to myofunctional changes. Deep bite malocclusion was a protective factor for both speech problems and altered tongue position when compared to a normal overbite.
publisher Faculdade De Odontologia De Bauru - USP
publishDate 2021
url http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1678-77572021000100433
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