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. 2013 Oct 3;13:50. doi: 10.1186/1472-6831-13-50

Table 4.

Subjectively assessed oral cleanliness at follow up

  6-month group 12-month group 24-month group Statistical test
Level of oral cleanlinessd (N = 307)
 
 
 
Kruskal-
1 (Least clean)
0
2 (2.0)
3 (3.0)
Wallis Test
2
9 (8.4)
3 (3.0)
12 (12.0)
 
3
42 (39.2)
48 (48.0)
55 (55.0)
P = 0.004
4
51 (47.7)
43 (43.0)
23 (25.0)
 
5 (Cleanest)
5 (4.7)
4 (4.0)
5 (5.0)
 
'High’e level of oral cleanliness at follow-up (N = 307)
 
 
 
Χ2 test
N (%) scoring 'High’
56 (52.3)
47 (47.0)
30 (30.0)
P = 0.003
Complete dataset analysis (N = 307)
Odds Ratio from Logistic regression
1.00
0.95
0.40
-
(95% CI) for follow up adjusted for baseline high level of oral cleanliness
 
(0.53, 1.70)
(0.22, 0.74)
 
Multiple imputation (ITT) analysis (N = 368)
Odds Ratio from Logistic regression
1.00
0.94
0.39
-
(95% CI) for follow up adjusted for baseline high level of oral cleanliness   (0.53, 1.66) (0.21, 0.73)  

d Assessed by asking participant, “How clean does your mouth feel on a scale of 1 to 5, where 1 is the least clean you could imagine and 5 is the cleanest you could imagine?”.

e'High’ level of oral cleanliness is defined as a participant reporting a score of 4 or 5.