Early Childhood Tooth Decay (ECTD) is more complicated than was originally suggested 20 years ago. The multifactorial aspect of ECTD is not only a dental problem. To truly prevent this illness, health and social service professionals must be involved. Health professionals can be supportive of parents by helping them to develop parenting skills which could prevent ECTD. Early recognition, behaviour modification and targeted prevention are necessary to decrease the incidence of Early Childhood Tooth Decay.
Early Childhood Tooth Decay has been referred to in the past by many names including: Nursing Bottle Mouth (Fass, 1962), Milk Bottle Mouth (1962), Baby Bottle Syndrome (1970), Nursing Bottle Caries (1970), Baby Bottle Tooth Decay (1983), Nursing Caries (Ripa, 1983). The most current title: Early Childhood Caries (1994) is unsatisfactory because it does not provide an anatomical reference and is not a term clearly understood by the public.
In light of this the Ontario Association of Public Health Dentistry (1999) recommends the term Early Childhood Tooth Decay be used when referring to this condition.
Currently the most popular definition is: one or more carious lesions (cavities) in the maxillary anterior (upper six front) teeth in a child three years of age or younger.
Prolonged exposure of teeth to fermentable carbohydrates (sucrose, fructose, lactose, etc.): through the use of bottle, breast, tippee cups, plastic bottles with straws high sugar consumption in infancy sweetened pacifiers long term sweetened medication going to sleep with a bottle containing anything but water prolonged use of the bottle beyond one year nursing without cleaning teeth
*Risk factors are not in order of importance. No one risk factor is responsible for ECTD.
Preventive Messages for Health Professionals to Share with the Public