2006
DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0528.2006.00282.x
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A community study on the relationship between stress, coping, affective dispositions and periodontal attachment loss

Abstract: Chronic job and financial strains, depression, inadequate coping, and maladaptive trait dispositions are significant risk indicators for periodontal attachment loss. Adequate coping and adaptive trait dispositions, evidenced as high problem-focused coping and low anxiety/depression trait, may reduce the stress-associated odds.

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Cited by 99 publications
(148 citation statements)
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References 57 publications
(101 reference statements)
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“…All of the studies used exclusion criteria and achieved restriction. Nine studies performed stratification of the study sample as follows: Refulio et al [28] (gender and smoking habits); Bakri et al [4] and Forte et al [32](stress exposure); three studies [33,39,41] (age and race; Spalj et al [35] (age and stress exposure); Ishisaka et al [36] (smoking habits and race); and Ng et al [37] (geographic location, high and low emotional copers). Five studies performed matching between the study groups as follows: Mousavijazi et al [38] and Bakri et al [4] matched for gender and smoking habits; Lopez et al [39] matched for age, smoking habits and initial disease extent; Chiou et al [33] performed matching for marital status and smoking habits; and Ishisaka et al [36] matched for oral hygiene and preventive measures.…”
Section: Control Of Confounding Variablesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…All of the studies used exclusion criteria and achieved restriction. Nine studies performed stratification of the study sample as follows: Refulio et al [28] (gender and smoking habits); Bakri et al [4] and Forte et al [32](stress exposure); three studies [33,39,41] (age and race; Spalj et al [35] (age and stress exposure); Ishisaka et al [36] (smoking habits and race); and Ng et al [37] (geographic location, high and low emotional copers). Five studies performed matching between the study groups as follows: Mousavijazi et al [38] and Bakri et al [4] matched for gender and smoking habits; Lopez et al [39] matched for age, smoking habits and initial disease extent; Chiou et al [33] performed matching for marital status and smoking habits; and Ishisaka et al [36] matched for oral hygiene and preventive measures.…”
Section: Control Of Confounding Variablesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Two of the studies were conducted only with women [16,34], and two studies did not mention the gender distribution [29,31]. In most of the studies [4,17,[28][29][30]37,38,[40][41][42], the participants were patients at a university periodontal clinic or private dental practice. Five studies [31,33,35,36,41] were epidemiological surveys involving the residents in a particular area or a randomly selected general population.…”
Section: Description Of the Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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