4.3 Article

Enamel neonatal line thickness in deciduous teeth of Australian children from known maternal health and pregnancy conditions

Journal

EARLY HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
Volume 137, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.earlhumdev.2019.07.004

Keywords

Enamel; Dental histology; Neonatal line; Alcohol; Prenatal; Perinatal; Postnatal

Funding

  1. ANU College of Arts and Social Sciences
  2. Australian Research Council [DE170100578]
  3. OSP 2019 funds from the ANU School of Archaeology and Anthropology
  4. Australian Research Council [DE170100578] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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Background: Physiological disruptions to early human development have implications for health and disease in later life. Limited research has explored how prenatal factors influence dental development in children of mothers with known pregnancy conditions. Enamel in human deciduous teeth begins forming in utero and is highly susceptible to physiological upsets experienced perinatally. The moment of birth itself is marked in deciduous enamel by the Neonatal Line (NNL) as a baby transitions from the uterine to external environment. This study evaluates the effect of maternal health factors that include stress and alcohol consumption on NNL in teeth from Australian children. Study design and subjects: Mothers (n = 53) were interviewed about their health during pregnancy and experience of birth. Sixty-five deciduous teeth (incisors, molars, one canine) from their children were donated for histological examination. Neonatal line thickness was measured from thin sections and evaluated against maternal and neonatal factors using statistical analyses, controlling for tooth type and birth number. Results and conclusions: The only maternal factor of a statistically significant effect on NNL thickness was alcohol consumption. Children of mothers who drank occasionally during pregnancy had a thicker NNL when compared to children of mothers who abstained. These results suggest that maternal lifestyle factors influence NNL formation possibly due to physiological changes that disrupt calcium homeostasis during enamel deposition. We highlight large intra-specific variation in human NNL expression. The potential of dental sampling in identifying children with prenatal exposure to alcohol is suggested.

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