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1.
Pakistan Oral and Dental Journal. 2016; 36 (1): 35-37
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-179042

ABSTRACT

The aim of the study is to determine the association of oral lichen planus with hepatitis C and diabetes mellitus


A retrospective cohort study was carried out at the Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Sardar Begum Dental College, Peshawar from January 201 1 to July 2015. A total of 34 male and female patients having oral lichen planus were selected with age range 20-60 years and mean age 39.4 +/- 15.8 years. Only clinical features were included to diagnose oral lichen planus which was made through the clinical evaluation of patient's oral cavity by a specialist team at the Department as proposed by van der Meij et al in 2003 based on the WHO definition of oral lichen planus. The data were analyzed through SPSS 22 with significance level ofp-value <0.05 and chi-square statistics were applied for association


The results showed that the data was statistically not significant with p-value >0.05 for all diseases having lichen planus and chi-square statistics revealed that no association exist among lichen planus, diabetes mellitus and hepatitis C. This study fails to find any association between oral lichen planus, hepatitis C and diabetes mellitus


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Adult , Middle Aged , Hepatitis C , Retrospective Studies , Cohort Studies , Diabetes Mellitus
2.
Pakistan Oral and Dental Journal. 2015; 35 (4): 578-580
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-179579

ABSTRACT

The aim of the study was to evaluate the causes of common conditions leading to tooth extraction, male/female ratio in diabetic patients. This was a retrospective cohort study. Data were collected from previous records between January 2011 to July 2015 from the Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Sardar Begum Dental College, Peshawar. Among 2,103 total diabetic patients presented to the department, 1,618 diabetic patients have their complete record for tooth extractions. The primary reasons for exodontia specified in the records were Caries, Periodontitis, others. Others include those patients who have extractions either due to preprosthetic purpose, trauma or fracture or any other reason other than caries and periodontitis. The data was analysed through SPSS 22. The mean age presentation was 47.50 +/- 19.82 years and the age range 25-70 years. There were 1,618 extractions carried out in 2,103 subjects [76.94%]. The female diabetic patients predominate n=983 [60.75%] the male patients n=635 [39.25%]. Caries was the dominant cause of tooth extraction in both subjects n= 1042 [64.40%] followed by periodontitis n= 416 [25.71%] and others n=160 [9.90%]. Caries is the dominant cause of extraction in diabetic patients and female diabetic patients predominate male diabetic patients in terms of tooth extraction

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