Clinical trials with herbal products for the prevention of dental caries and their quality: A scoping study
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ANCUCEANU, Robert, ANGHEL, Adriana-Iuliana, IONESCU, Camelia Antoniu, HOVANEŢ, Marilena Viorica, COJOCARU-TOMA, Maria, DINU, Mihaela. Clinical trials with herbal products for the prevention of dental caries and their quality: A scoping study. In: Biomolecules, 2019, nr. 9(12), p. 0. ISSN 2218-273X. DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/biom9120884
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Biomolecules
Numărul 9(12) / 2019 / ISSN 2218-273X /ISSNe 2218-273X

Clinical trials with herbal products for the prevention of dental caries and their quality: A scoping study

DOI:https://doi.org/10.3390/biom9120884

Pag. 0-0

Ancuceanu Robert1, Anghel Adriana-Iuliana1, Ionescu Camelia Antoniu1, Hovaneţ Marilena Viorica1, Cojocaru-Toma Maria2, Dinu Mihaela1
 
1 University of Medicine and Pharmacy “Carol Davilla”, Bucharest,
2 ”Nicolae Testemițanu” State University of Medicine and Pharmacy
 
 
Disponibil în IBN: 4 mai 2021


Rezumat

It is currently recognized that an injudicious strategy about caries in the last decades has been not only focusing of research mostly in children, but also the narrow focusing on fluoride, because despite sufficient availability of fluoride in water and oral healthcare products, caries levels escalate steadily as people get older and caries remain a main public health issue to be settled. In the last two decades the scientific community intensified efforts of exploring other products for caries prevention, herbal products being one of these approaches. Preliminary evidence indicated that clinical trials for caries prevention with herbal products are heterogeneous in design, quality and products evaluated, we therefore performed a scoping review intended to explore the main characteristics of such clinical trials. From an initial collection of 1986 unique papers from different literature databases, 56 articles satisfied the inclusion and exclusion criteria. The species investigated, dosage forms, study designs, duration of intervention, controls, endpoints, quality of reporting, and risk of bias are discussed. Of the trials reviewed here, 85.71% reported positive results but given the methodological flaws and biases affecting them, it is difficult to conclude on the efficacy of those products based on the studies published thus far.

Cuvinte-cheie
clinical trials, dental caries, Herbal, prevention, Scoping review