1Faculty of Higher Studies Zaragoza, National Autonomous University of Mexico, Ciudad de México, Mexico
Corresponding author details:
José Francisco Murrieta Pruneda, Faculty of Higher Studies Zaragoza
National Autonomous University of Mexico
Mexico
Copyright: 2022 © Murrieta-PrunedaJF, et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4. 0 international License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
The aim of this study was to evaluate frequency and distribution of dysfunctional
habits and their relationship with age and sex, in a group of preschoolers from
Iztapalapa in Mexico City. Methodology. A cross-sectional study was carried out in
351 preschool children, both sexes. The epidemiological survey consisted of the oral
examination prior to standardization of a Dental Surgeon (Kappa = 0. 911) and the
application of a questionnaire (Cronbach’s alpha = 0. 832). To measure the reliability of
the questionnaire, the Cronbach’s alpha value was calculated and for the associations
between the study variables, Pearson’s Chi-square and Mantel and Haenszel’s Chisquare were calculated for tetheoretical contingency tables. Results. 69. 5% of the
preschoolers presented at least one dysfunctional habit. Onychophagia (30. 2%),
mouth breathing (10. 3%) and finger sucking (9. 7%) were the habits with the highest
frequency. The frequency of dysfunctional habits was associated with age (X2
=14.
636, p=0. 001), but not by sex (X2
MH=0. 043, p=0. 836). Conclusions. The frequency of
this type of oral habits turned out to be variable compared to that reported for other
populations with similar characteristics, which allows us to recognize that biological
and social conditions may be influencing this behavior.
Preschoolers; Dysfunctional habits; Cross-sectional study;
Onychophagia; Thumb sucking
A habit is a behavior that is acquired by the constant repetition of certain actions present in daily life [1-5], in this sense, dysfunctional oral habits are acquired customs or practices that their constant repetition lacks functionality, which initially can be performed consciously, but if their activity is prolonged, it can become an involuntary habit that can cause alterations in orofacial development [6-11].
Its etiology is multifactorial, however, the most frequent causes are caused by stress, anxiety, fear, or because doing it produces pleasure, safety and well-being to the child. Its frequency is variable, since cases ranging from 40. 7% in Colombian children12 to 67. 3% in Indians11 have been observed, without any type of relationship having been demonstrated so far in terms of sex or age, However, with regard to this last variable, it seems that the epidemiological behavior of this type of habits can be distributed differently depending on the age group to which it refers, thus, both the prolonged use of the pacifier and the bottle are usually more frequent in children of the motherinfant group, onychophagia and finger sucking are the most prevalent in preschool and schoolchildren [12-18].
Non-nutritive sucking, carried out with the pacifier, finger or lips, adopted in most cases in the absence of breastfeeding or due to oral gratification received, have also shown a variable behavior, for example, in the case of finger sucking the Reports indicate that it presents with a great variability that goes from 7. 9% to 49. 3% in children [14,19-21]. Cheilophagia, which consists of a habit of compulsively chewing on the lip, preferably the lower lip, causes an incessant retraction of the jaw, a condition that modifies the intensity of muscular activity and therefore alters the harmony of the relationship between the teeth. Yes. Its appearance is most frequently associated with lifestyle conditions and the quality of the intra-family relationship [8,11,21]. The occurrence of this habit has been reported with a variability ranging from 1. 92% in Brazilians [22] to 18. 3% in Nigerians [17].
Onychophagia is a habit that is commonly observed in childhood and adolescence, it is an unusual habit before the age of 3 and it is noted that its frequency increases with increasing age. It is usually associated with situations under stress or of some anxiety origin for the child. Like object biting, they are undesirable habits because they interfere with occlusion and oral hygiene. Their importance lies in the fact that they can influence the dental position, due to the fact that inappropriate forces are exerted on the lingual surfaces of the anterior maxillary teeth, causing displacements in the labial direction [23-25]. The variability with which it is observed ranges from 17. 1% in Mexican children14 to 58. 0% in Ecuadorians [7], not so, in relation to the habit of biting objects whose frequency ranges from 1. 5% in Mexican children14 to 33. 0% in Nigerians [17]. In relation to mouth breathing, the child discovers that he can breathe through the mouth when for some reason the upper respiratory tract is impeded or functionally limited, due to obstructions of the upper airways, deviations of the septum, inflammation of the basement membrane or due to the inflammation of the turbinates, which causes it to try to compensate by placing the tongue lower, altering the entire support of the upper teeth and facilitating the occurrence of a malocclusion [26-29]. Its presence is also variable, since it has been observed in a range that goes from 11. 1% in Indians [26] to 49% in Nigerian children [17]. Regarding lingual protraction, this habit consists of placing the tongue between the teeth, either in the anterior area at the incisor level or between the lateral sectors at the molar level, mainly during swallowing and phonoarticulation functions. The epidemiological behavior of this habit also shows significant variability since it has been observed in 5% in Brazilians [27] to 66. 2% in Mexican children [14].
The objective of this research work was to evaluate the
frequency and distribution of this type of dysfunctional habits
and their possible relationship with age and sex in a group of
preschoolers from the Iztapalapa Mayor’s Office, Mexico City.
Study design and participants
A descriptive study was carried out, in the cross-sectional modality, in which a convenience sample made up of 351 preschoolers enrolled in the “Army of the East” kindergarten, located in the Iztapalapa City Hall, Mexico City, was studied. 45 children were excluded from the study due to three conditions: 1) Because their parents did not authorize their inclusion in the study, 2) Because they were not present on the day of the epidemiological survey, or 3) Because the child refused to be examined.
Ethical and legal considerations of the study
The project had the endorsement of the Bioethics and Biosafety Committee of the Dental Occlusion Research Line (LIFESZ-230506), attached to the Faculty of Higher Studies Zaragoza, of the National Autonomous University of Mexico. Likewise, informed consent was requested from the parents or guardians so that he and his son could be included in the study. During the calibration of the examiner and the epidemiological survey, the provisions of the technical standard of the Mexican Ministry of Health (NOM013-SSA2-200635), which regulates the regulations for the prevention of infection transmission, were taken into consideration.
Examiner standardization
For the epidemiological survey, a dental surgeon was calibrated through the direct method, ensuring its reliability by calculating absolute and relative concordances and Cohen’s kappa coefficient, thus avoiding that said concordances were due to chance (digital suction Kappa = 0. 849. P = 0. 01; mouth breathing Kappa = 0. 991. P = 0. 0001; onychophagia Kappa = 0. 928. P = 0. 001; atypical swallowing Kappa = 0. 940. P = 0. 001; tongue protraction Kappa = 0. 933. P = 0. 0001; cheilophagia Kappa = 0. 899. P = 0. 001; bite of objects Kappa = 0. 926. P = 0. 001; lip suction Kappa = 0. 879. P = 0. 01 and use of bottle Kappa = 0. 927. P = 0. 001). For the questionnaire, the value of the Cronbach’s alpha coefficient was calculated, which turned out to be equal to 0. 832, which proved to be a fairly homogeneous and reliable instrument means.
The epidemiological survey was carried out in a school classroom during class hours by a Dental Surgeon, illuminating the clinical field with a BORUIT®, USA, rechargeable headlamp, with 1200LM white light, disposable gloves and a flat dental mirror of the # 5, no Hu-Friedy® brand magnification. Each parent or guardian was administered a questionnaire in order to confirm the presence of any of the dysfunctional habits of interest in the study.
Variables and clinical assessment
The dysfunctional oral habits that were studied in preschool children were: finger sucking, lip sucking, onychophagia, tongue protraction, cheilophagia, object biting and mouth breathing, as well as their distribution by age and sex. During the clinical examination the fingers were explored verifying their cleanliness and evidence of calluses; Regarding the lips, it was observed if the upper one covered two thirds of the incisors, likewise, if the closing of the lips was carried out smoothly without forcing the lower one. If the lower lip was located without alterations in relation to the upper lip and if it showed irritation of the skin around the lower lip. Examination of the nose made it possible to identify the contour of the nasal flaps and to observe the sealing of the lips during the act of breathing; Regarding the fingers, the situation of the nails and cuticles was considered to verify the existence of some type of wear or bite of these, or the presence of inflammation or infection; Finally, the contour, insertion and tonicity of the buccinator, orbicularis and tassel muscles of the chin were verified.
Statistical methods
For the statistical analysis, the statistical package SPSS v. 21. 0 (IBM, USA) for Windows was used. To measure the presence of parafunctional oral habits, frequencies and proportions were calculated. To measure the reliability of the questionnaire, the value of Cronbach’s Alpha Coefficient was calculated. To determine the association between each habit with sex, the Mantel and Haenszel Chi-square value was calculated because the variables were nominally measured and the data presented in tetheoretical tables, in the case of the frequency of these habits and their possible Association with age, Pearson’s Chi-square was calculated taking into account the condition that if the value of any of the cells was ≤ 5, the Likelihood Ratio value was considered. In all cases it was contrasted with a confidence level of 95%. The tables were designed in Office Microsoft® Excel v. 365.
The study sample consisted of 351 preschoolers of whom 20. 50% were 3 years old, 35. 60% 4 years old and 43. 90% 5 years old, with a representation by sex of 57. 50% for the female and 42. 50% for the male (Table 1). The presence of dysfunctional habits in the population showed that (69. 5%) of the minors presented at least one habit, of these, (13. 7%) had up to two habits and (0. 6%) up to three habits simultaneously. Onychophagia was the habit with the highest frequency (30. 2%), followed by mouth breathing (10. 3%) and finger sucking (9. 7%). Likewise, the habits that occurred less frequently were object biting and cheilophagia, 5. 7% and 5. 4% respectively (Table 2). The behavior on the distribution of these habits by age showed that the older their age increased their frequency (11. 4% at 3 years, 28. 8% at 4 years and 29. 3% at 5 years), showing a highly significant statistical association (X2MH = 14. 636, p = 0. 001); Finger sucking occurred more frequently in children aged 4 years (4. 0%), at 3 years (2. 30%) and at 5 years (3. 4%), with no relationship between the two variables (X2MH = 1. 126, p = 0. 569). Lip sucking occurred more frequently at the age of 4 years (6. 0%), at 3 years (2. 0%) and at 5 years (1. 4%), differences that also turned out to be statistically significant (Likelihood ratio = 14. 890, p = 0. 0001). Onychophagia prevailed in 5-yearold preschoolers (17. 9%), at 3 years (0. 3%) and at 4 years (12. 0%), where a great association with this variable was evidenced (Likelihood ratio = 51. 510, p = 0. 0001). Glossophagia was slightly more frequent at 4 years (4. 6%) compared to 3 and 5 years, with no evidence of any association between the two (Likelihood ratio = 2. 591, p = 0. 274), regarding cheilophagia, its Presence was greater at the age of 5 years (4. 8%), as was the onychophagia, at 4 years (4. 8%) and at the age of 3 years, no cases were reported, finding differences in the behavior of the variables, resulting in statistically significant (Likelihood ratio = 20. 288, p = 0. 0001).
The habit of biting objects was presented with a frequency
slightly similar to the habit of cheilophagia, both in the frequency
and in the association between these variables (Likelihood ratio
= 9. 693, p = 0. 008). Finally, mouth breathing occurred more
frequently at the age of 5 years (4. 8%), also with evidence of
a relationship between the variables in question (Likelihood
ratio = 12. 239, p = 0. 002) (Table 3). Regarding the distribution
of dysfunctional habits by sex, it was observed that it was more
prevalent in girls (39. 3%) compared to boys (30. 20%). The digital sucking habit occurred more frequently in the female
sex (5. 4%) and in the male sex (4. 3%) without statistically
significant evidence (X2MH = 0. 043, p = 0. 836), as far as the lip
sucking habit was presented similarly to the previous habit, girls
reported (6. 6%) and boys (2. 8%), without a statistically significant
difference (X2MH = 2,200, p = 0. 138). The habit of onychophagia and
glossophagia were performed more frequently by girls (16. 2% and
6. 3%) and by boys (14. 0% and 3. 1%) respectively, however, these
differences were not statistically significant (X2
MH = 0. 886, p = 0. 346
and X2
MH= 1. 239, p = 0. 266). Cheilophagia and object biting occurred
more frequently in girls (3. 7% and 3. 4%) and in boys (1. 7% and
2. 3%) respectively, however, there was no relationship between
these variables (X2MH = 0. 972, p = 0. 324 and X2MH = 0. 052, p = 0.
819). Finally, the habit of mouth breathing, like the previous habits,
occurred more frequently in females (5. 4%) and in children (4. 8%),
which also did not show statistical relevance with respect to sex
(X2MH = 0. 374, p = 0. 541) (Table 4).
Table 1: Distribution of thepreschoolsamplebyage and sex.
Table 2: Percentagedistribution of parafunctionalhabits
Table 3: Percentagedistribution of cases of parafunctional oral habitsbyage.
Table 4: Percentage distribution of cases of parafunctional oral habits by sex
According to what was observed in the study population, the
frequency of dysfunctional oral habits in preschool children was
higher compared to that reported by Rodríguez et al. [1] in Cubans
and by Murrieta et al. [14] in Mexicans, but it was lower than
that observed by Machado et al. [15] in Portuguese. According
to the age variable, the behavior showed that as it increased,
the frequency of habits was also higher, which turned out to
be statistically significant, showing that there is a relationship
between this variable and the study event; Therefore, it seems
that age was a cumulative risk factor for developing this type of
habit, an event that was similar to that observed by AlSadhan
et al. [4] and Dhull et al. [11] who identified that the beginning
of the development of this type of habits begins from the age
of two and can last up to six years, increasing its frequency as
one gets older [18,19]. The relevance of finding these types of habits present in preschoolers is because most are dysfunctional
or non-physiological, which develop during the initial stage as a
replacement or succession of another habit, whose origin may be
due to a great psychological load, in In particular, a tendency is
emphasized for them to appear in the final stages of the preschool
cycle and the beginning of school, when the child becomes more
aware of his environment [36]. By sex, it slightly predominated in
girls, however, this difference was never statistically significant,
a behavior similar to that observed by AlSadhan et al. [4] and
Martínez et al. [9], showing that the sex of the preschooler does
not matter, both girls and boys seem to have the same probability
of developing them, since they can be exposed to similar stress
situations [11,14,17]. Onychophagia was the most frequent
dysfunctional habit, and its relevance is based on the possible
repercussions it has on the oral cavity due to the constant
production of microtrauma and gingivitis [18,37,42]. Mouth
breathing was the second most frequent, which was observed to a lesser extent than that reported by Dickmar et al. [2] in
Venezuelans and Murrieta et al. [14] in Mexicans, but higher than
that reported by Silva et al. [16] also in Mexicans. Its relevance
from the clinical point of view lies in the fact that it must be
identified in the most timely manner possible to avoid generating
alterations that have an impact on development, such as: postural
misalignments, recurrent infections, decreased cognitive activity,
affectations in self-esteem, among other. It is also important, since
this habit is considered an etiological factor for the establishment
of a malocclusion, particularly of Angle’s classes II and III [16,43].
On the other hand, digital suction was lower than expected
compared to that reported by AlSadhad et al. [4] and Rodríguez
et al. [1] in Saudis and Cubans, however, it was higher than that
observed by Alves et al. [20] and Murrieta et al. [14] in Brazilian
and Mexican preschoolers, relevant behavior since at the
beginning or early ages it is considered as part of the maturation
process of children, but if it continues beyond four years, there is talk of regressive behaviors, becoming a habit difficult to
eradicate. Its duration, frequency, direction and intensity, added
to an unfavorable skeletal pattern, can cause various alterations
such as open bite, mandibular retrognathism, reduced chewing
function, language problems, hyperkeratosis and infections in
the sucked fingers, among others, affecting the social, emotional
and family areas of the child’s life [6,24,28]. The frequency of
the habit in this group of preschoolers reinforces the idea about
the behavior of any event that is not necessarily linear, since it
can be influenced by multiple factors that vary from subject to
subject. Lip sucking and cheilophagia occurred less frequently
than that reported by Rodríguez et al. [1] and Onyejaka etal. [23], but similar according to what was observed by Caruso et al. [10] and Dhull et al. [11] in Italians and Indians. These habits
are important because children develop them as a way to reduce
emotional and psychological tensions, such as anxiety and stress,
which leads to a point of reflection on the tranquility and safety
of the environments in which children are develop [37,19]. In the
case of lip sucking, it is usually little reported and even the criteria
for evaluating its frequency in the population are not completely
homogeneous, being an important reason why its study should be
expanded and more reliable diagnostic criteria standardized to
identify its presence. in children, however, it has been established
that in most cases the presence of this habit as a consequence
of a malocclusion; characterized fundamentally by the tendency
it has for the development of other alterations such as the open
bite and the increase in the horizontal overbite [1,14]. On the
other hand, the frequency of glossophagy was surprisingly higher
than expected, exceeding the results of Shulman et al. [29] in
Americans, but on a smaller scale than that observed by Majorana
et al. [30] in Italian. Its assessment is of great importance since
the stomatologist during clinical practice does not always make
a correct diagnosis of this habit. Its implications are relevant due
to the close relationship with lesions in the oral mucosa due to
systemic diseases such as Lesh-Nyhan syndrome and cerebral
palsy [4]. Regarding the bite of objects, it was observed that it
had a behavior similar to cheilophagia, its frequency was low
compared to that reported by Onyejaka et al. [23] in Nigerians. The
fact that it is observed more frequently as the age advances may
have the origin in which it is considered a habit of replacement
or succession. If it is not eliminated correctly, the first habit of
childhood will have relapses in later stages. Furthermore, it has
been observed that children adopt chewing to release emotional
tensions and to compensate for chewing forces [28]. Finally, it can
be concluded that the frequency of this type of habits was not as
high in the population, showing some differences in According to
the age group in the presence of some habits, but it was expected
since their behavior can be influenced by the age at which the
child is, its relevance is a function of being able to eradicate them
and thus prevent the dental occlusion is altered.
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