COLOR VISION DEFECT AND TOOTH SHADE SELECTION AMONG NIGERIAN DENTAL PRACTITIONERS

Autores/as

  • Cornelius Tokunbo Bamise
  • Temitope Ayodeji Esan
  • Patricia Adetokunbo Akeredolu
  • Onakpoya Oluwatoyin
  • Elizabeth Obhioneh Oziegbe

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7213/aor.v3i3.23133

Palabras clave:

Color vision defect, Dental practitioners, Ishihara test.

Resumen

OBJECTIVES: The aim of this work is to assess the prevalence of color defect and the mode of tooth shade selection among dental practioners. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Two hundred self administered questionnaires were sent to all the dentists in the six dental schools in Nigeria. The color vision status of the respondents was assessed using Isihara test. The investigators were calibrated for examining the numbers in the plates by comparing the results of Isihara test administered to them and were adjudged not to be color blind. Data was analyzed using SPSS version 11. Analysis used included frequencies cross tabulation, chi-square analysis and Fisher’s exact tests. RESULTS: The prevalence of color blindness among Nigerian dentists working in teaching hospitals was found to be 6.3%. The prevalence was higher in males (8.4%) than in the females (3.9%) giving a male female ratio of 2.2:1. Color vision defect was highest among Pedodontists (33.3%), followed by Oral surgeon (8.3%) and general dental practice (6.5%). None in Conservative dentistry and Prosthodontics have color vision defect. Majority of those with color vision defect usually select color with concurrence from other dentist. CONCLUSION: The prevalence of color defect among dentists in Nigeria is high compared to other studies. Dentists should be screened for color vision defect before they choose their specialty.

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Publicado

2007-11-28

Cómo citar

Bamise, C. T., Esan, T. A., Akeredolu, P. A., Oluwatoyin, O., & Oziegbe, E. O. (2007). COLOR VISION DEFECT AND TOOTH SHADE SELECTION AMONG NIGERIAN DENTAL PRACTITIONERS. Archives of Oral Research, 3(3). https://doi.org/10.7213/aor.v3i3.23133

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