Approval for this investigation was obtained from the Ethics Committee of the Medical University of Graz, and consent was obtained from the children that were selected for the study and their parents (Ethics Protocol No: 21-134 ex 09/10).
Graz is located in Styria, a county in the southeast of Austria. Its 262,566 inhabitants make it Austria’s second largest city. Its drinking water contains a low fluoride level (<0.1 mg/l). A dental health program (DHP) has been installed by the City Office of Education in public primary schools. Among others, the main goals of the DHP are to conduct a yearly oral inspection of every child to visually detect caries and orthodontic treatment needs and to provide a report of these results to the parents including recommendations for treatment. MIH is not included in the DHP. To carry out the DHP, the City Office of Education employs three dentists on a full-time basis, each of them in a separate school dental clinic. These three dentists (A, B, and C) were asked to include the diagnosis of MIH in the DHP. They agreed to do so, but the City Office of Education did not give us permission to use data other than those relating to MIH.
Primary school education in Austria comprises 4 years (grades) and starts when children are 6 years old. It is organized into classes with 15–35 children per class.
At the time of the investigation, there were 50 primary schools in Graz, including 38 public schools comprising 6938 pupils and 12 private schools comprising 1828 pupils. The latter were not available for this study.
A sample size of 1000 children was estimated to be statistically sufficient, which translated to 250 children from each grade and 334 children per investigator.
Classes were selected according to the investigation schedule of the DHP. Further randomization was not possible in the daily working schedule of the DHP.
Three to four classes per investigator and grade were needed to reach the desired number of children. Overall, 15 schools were assigned to the three school dental clinics (sdc-A, sdc-B, sdc-C) and were then invited to take part in the study in collaboration with the DHP. None of the schools refused. One thousand two hundred two first- to fourth-grade primary school children were asked to participate. None of the pupils refused to participate, as the examination was part of the DHP. The only reasons for children to be excluded from participation were if they did not fulfill the inclusion criteria or if they matched the exclusion criteria.
Inclusion criteria were as follows:
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a.
Between ages 6 and 12 (born in 1998–2003)
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b.
Presence of sufficiently erupted molars (at least one molar erupted more than half of the crown)
Exclusion criteria were as follows:
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a.
Consent form could not be obtained from the parents
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b.
Child’s absence on the day of the examination
Ninety-one children were not included; thus, in total, 1111 (547 males:564 females) first- to fourth-grade primary school children were examined. The distribution of the investigated children according to classes, grades, and examiners is documented in Table 1. The mean age of the children at the time of the examination was 9.0 ± 1.2 years.
Table 1 Age, gender, and distribution of the investigated children. Class grades and examiners
All clinical examinations were performed at the three school dental clinics. Before the examination, all participating children received a single-use toothbrush with fluoridated toothpaste to use to clean their teeth under the supervision of the examiner. Next, the children were placed in a dental chair. Using a halogen light, dental mirrors, and dental probes, the three previously trained dentists (see below for training details) performed a full-mouth inspection of the wet teeth. Thus, all teeth were investigated for the presence of MIH lesions.
So as not to disrupt the schedule of the DHP, the three investigators made a simple yes/no decision regarding the presence of MIH in a particular tooth. To educate parents, each affected child was given information on MIH and was invited for a second examination (performed by the author BB at the Department of Conservative Dentistry) in which the severity grade according to the criteria of the EAPD was evaluated for all affected teeth.
In the DHP, caries lesions were scored and documented on a separate data sheet, but as mentioned previously, these records were not available for this study due to lack of permission.
According to the EAPD guidelines [2], children were to be diagnosed as affected by MIH if at least one FPM was affected by hypomineralization, enamel breakdown, or atypical restoration [3]. MIH opacities in teeth other than molars and incisors were noted. Isolated lesions in incisors without involvement of FPMs were also noted but were not classified as MIH cases.
Furthermore, the following findings were not diagnosed as MIH: demarcated opacities of less than 1 mm in diameter, amelogenesis imperfecta, tetracycline staining, erosion, white spot caries lesions, and fluorosis. Prior to the study, the examiners had received training in the diagnosis of MIH, carried out by the author BB in the following format: a 1-h PowerPoint presentation was given on MIH (according to the EAPD criteria: at least one FPM affected) and confusable enamel defects. Colored handouts were given for personal study use. One week later, knowledge was verified through brief oral communication.
Calibration was then achieved through the use of 29 clinical photographs (18 cases of MIH and 11 of non-MIH), which came from the author BB. A kappa statistic was used to measure the concordance between the 3 examiners and the diagnoses of MIH and produced kappa values of 0.78, 0.85, and 0.93.
Statistical analysis was carried out in cooperation with the Institute of Medical Informatics, Statistics and Documentation of the Medical University of Graz. The collected data were analyzed using SPSS package version 19.0 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, USA). A descriptive analysis of the proportion and distribution of MIH was performed. A correlation of the affected teeth with the jaws was analyzed using a Pearson chi-square test. Fisher’s exact test was performed to analyze the severity. A level of p < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.