PAR 1 PEDS- INTRO TO PEDIATRIC
DENTISTRY EXAM QUESTIONS AND
ANSWERS (2024|2025 UPDATES)
Why is premature loss of primary teeth clinically significant? A) Permanent teeth erupt
immediately B) Primary teeth have no function C) Space loss alters eruption of
permanent dentition D) Speech development is unaffected - Answer- C) Space loss
alters eruption of permanent dentition
Why are primary teeth important for speech development? A) They provide stable
articulation surfaces B) They determine voice pitch C) They increase tongue size D)
They regulate saliva - Answer- A) They provide stable articulation surfaces
Why does early loss of primary teeth negatively affect self-esteem? A) Children do not
notice appearance B) Esthetics influence psychosocial development C) Peers are
indifferent D) Occlusion is irrelevant - Answer- B) Esthetics influence psychosocial
development
Why do clinicians discourage the idea that "baby teeth don't matter"? A) Primary teeth
are replaced immediately B) They are more painful to treat C) They influence long-term
oral health and development D) They never get cavities - Answer- D) They influence
long-term oral health and development
Why is adolescent rampant caries considered a distinct clinical entity? A) It involves
rapid, multi-surface decay B) It affects only molars C) It resolves spontaneously D) It is
noninfectious - Answer- A) It involves rapid, multi-surface decay
Why does severe caries affect nutrition in growing children? A) Pain limits eating and
food choices B) Digestion improves C) Appetite hormones increase D) Mastication
becomes more efficient - Answer- C) Pain limits eating and food choices
Why does untreated caries increase risk for systemic infection in children? A) Oral
bacteria can spread beyond the tooth B) Enamel thickens C) Saliva sterilizes tissues D)
Immune response is unnecessary - Answer- B) Oral bacteria can spread beyond the
tooth
Why is early pediatric dental care framed as a public health priority? A) It reduces
orthodontic demand only B) It improves esthetics C) It replaces medical care D) It
prevents lifelong disease patterns and inequities - Answer- D) It prevents lifelong
disease patterns and inequities
,What clinical criterion alone is sufficient to diagnose early childhood caries (ECC) in a
child under six years old? A) White spot lesions on permanent teeth B) Gingival
inflammation without cavitation C) Any decayed, missing, or filled surface on a primary
tooth D) Posterior occlusal caries only - Answer- C) Any decayed, missing, or filled
surface on a primary tooth
Why does any smooth-surface caries in a child under three years old qualify as severe
ECC (S-ECC)? A) Disease at this age indicates extremely high caries risk B) Smooth
surfaces erupt earlier C) Posterior teeth are unaffected D) Enamel is thicker in infants -
Answer- A) Disease at this age indicates extremely high caries risk
Why are anterior primary teeth specifically emphasized in the diagnosis of S-ECC in
children aged 3-5 years? A) They exfoliate first B) They are easier to restore C) They
are more esthetic D) Caries in anterior teeth reflects aggressive disease progression -
Answer- D) Caries in anterior teeth reflects aggressive disease progression
Why are DMFS thresholds used to define S-ECC severity at different ages? A)
Radiographs are unavailable B) Disease burden must be age-adjusted C) Posterior
teeth erupt later D) Esthetics vary with age - Answer- B) Disease burden must be age-
adjusted
What best explains why ECC is considered a disease process rather than isolated
cavities? A) Cavities resolve spontaneously B) Only posterior teeth are affected C)
Caries reflects an ongoing infectious imbalance D) Enamel thickness determines
outcome - Answer- C) Caries reflects an ongoing infectious imbalance
Why does premature loss of primary teeth increase orthodontic risk? A) Space loss
alters eruption paths of permanent teeth B) Primary teeth are unnecessary for guidance
C) Mandibular growth accelerates D) Occlusion self-corrects - Answer- A) Space loss
alters eruption paths of permanent teeth
How does loss of primary teeth impair mastication in young children? A) Tongue
compensates fully B) Occlusal function is reduced during chewing C) Saliva increases
D) Permanent molars erupt immediately - Answer- B) Occlusal function is reduced
during chewing
Why can untreated ECC negatively affect a child's self-esteem? A) Children are
unaware of appearance B) Speech improves C) Pain enhances resilience D) Visible
decay affects psychosocial development - Answer- D) Visible decay affects
psychosocial development
Why is the belief that "baby teeth don't matter" clinically dangerous? A) Primary teeth
influence long-term oral health outcomes B) They never become infected C) They
exfoliate within months D) They do not affect nutrition - Answer- A) Primary teeth
influence long-term oral health outcomes
, Why do parents often delay seeking dental care until symptoms appear? A) Preventive
dentistry is ineffective B) Access is universal C) Caries is often asymptomatic early D)
Children report pain early - Answer- C) Caries is often asymptomatic early
What was a defining limitation of historical pediatric dental advice regarding fluoride? A)
Overprescription B) Delayed use until children could spit C) Excessive topical
application D) Universal supplementation - Answer- B) Delayed use until children could
spit
Why is extraction-only management of carious primary teeth now considered
inappropriate? A) It is too expensive B) Children tolerate pain well C) Primary teeth
regenerate D) It ignores disease control and developmental consequences - Answer- D)
It ignores disease control and developmental consequences
Why is modern caries management focused on arresting disease progression rather
than waiting for pain? A) Caries is a bacterial infection that worsens without intervention
B) Pain predicts severity C) Restorations cure infection D) Enamel remineralizes
automatically - Answer- A) Caries is a bacterial infection that worsens without
intervention
Why is caries risk assessment essential before selecting treatment? A) All children
receive the same care B) Risk determines intensity and modality of intervention C) Age
alone predicts outcome D) Restorations eliminate bacteria - Answer- B) Risk determines
intensity and modality of intervention
Why is the dental office considered a high-risk environment for pathogen transmission?
A) Children are immunocompromised B) Saliva is sterile C) Gloves reduce tactile
sensation D) The oral cavity contains diverse bacteria and viruses - Answer- D) The oral
cavity contains diverse bacteria and viruses
Why is bacterial colonization possible even before tooth eruption? A) Enamel is present
prenatally B) Bacteria require diet only C) Soft tissues can harbor oral microbes D)
Teeth erupt sterile permanently - Answer- C) Soft tissues can harbor oral microbes
Which element of the caries model represents patient susceptibility? A) Substrate B)
Host factors C) Time D) Bacteria - Answer- B) Host factors
Why does frequent carbohydrate intake increase caries risk more than total quantity
alone? A) It prolongs acidic conditions at the tooth surface B) Sugar type is irrelevant C)
Saliva becomes alkaline D) Fluoride is deactivated - Answer- A) It prolongs acidic
conditions at the tooth surface
Why does biofilm maturation increase resistance to caries control measures? A)
Bacteria die off B) Fluoride becomes toxic C) Saliva penetrates better D) Structured
biofilms resist buffering and disruption - Answer- D) Structured biofilms resist buffering
and disruption
DENTISTRY EXAM QUESTIONS AND
ANSWERS (2024|2025 UPDATES)
Why is premature loss of primary teeth clinically significant? A) Permanent teeth erupt
immediately B) Primary teeth have no function C) Space loss alters eruption of
permanent dentition D) Speech development is unaffected - Answer- C) Space loss
alters eruption of permanent dentition
Why are primary teeth important for speech development? A) They provide stable
articulation surfaces B) They determine voice pitch C) They increase tongue size D)
They regulate saliva - Answer- A) They provide stable articulation surfaces
Why does early loss of primary teeth negatively affect self-esteem? A) Children do not
notice appearance B) Esthetics influence psychosocial development C) Peers are
indifferent D) Occlusion is irrelevant - Answer- B) Esthetics influence psychosocial
development
Why do clinicians discourage the idea that "baby teeth don't matter"? A) Primary teeth
are replaced immediately B) They are more painful to treat C) They influence long-term
oral health and development D) They never get cavities - Answer- D) They influence
long-term oral health and development
Why is adolescent rampant caries considered a distinct clinical entity? A) It involves
rapid, multi-surface decay B) It affects only molars C) It resolves spontaneously D) It is
noninfectious - Answer- A) It involves rapid, multi-surface decay
Why does severe caries affect nutrition in growing children? A) Pain limits eating and
food choices B) Digestion improves C) Appetite hormones increase D) Mastication
becomes more efficient - Answer- C) Pain limits eating and food choices
Why does untreated caries increase risk for systemic infection in children? A) Oral
bacteria can spread beyond the tooth B) Enamel thickens C) Saliva sterilizes tissues D)
Immune response is unnecessary - Answer- B) Oral bacteria can spread beyond the
tooth
Why is early pediatric dental care framed as a public health priority? A) It reduces
orthodontic demand only B) It improves esthetics C) It replaces medical care D) It
prevents lifelong disease patterns and inequities - Answer- D) It prevents lifelong
disease patterns and inequities
,What clinical criterion alone is sufficient to diagnose early childhood caries (ECC) in a
child under six years old? A) White spot lesions on permanent teeth B) Gingival
inflammation without cavitation C) Any decayed, missing, or filled surface on a primary
tooth D) Posterior occlusal caries only - Answer- C) Any decayed, missing, or filled
surface on a primary tooth
Why does any smooth-surface caries in a child under three years old qualify as severe
ECC (S-ECC)? A) Disease at this age indicates extremely high caries risk B) Smooth
surfaces erupt earlier C) Posterior teeth are unaffected D) Enamel is thicker in infants -
Answer- A) Disease at this age indicates extremely high caries risk
Why are anterior primary teeth specifically emphasized in the diagnosis of S-ECC in
children aged 3-5 years? A) They exfoliate first B) They are easier to restore C) They
are more esthetic D) Caries in anterior teeth reflects aggressive disease progression -
Answer- D) Caries in anterior teeth reflects aggressive disease progression
Why are DMFS thresholds used to define S-ECC severity at different ages? A)
Radiographs are unavailable B) Disease burden must be age-adjusted C) Posterior
teeth erupt later D) Esthetics vary with age - Answer- B) Disease burden must be age-
adjusted
What best explains why ECC is considered a disease process rather than isolated
cavities? A) Cavities resolve spontaneously B) Only posterior teeth are affected C)
Caries reflects an ongoing infectious imbalance D) Enamel thickness determines
outcome - Answer- C) Caries reflects an ongoing infectious imbalance
Why does premature loss of primary teeth increase orthodontic risk? A) Space loss
alters eruption paths of permanent teeth B) Primary teeth are unnecessary for guidance
C) Mandibular growth accelerates D) Occlusion self-corrects - Answer- A) Space loss
alters eruption paths of permanent teeth
How does loss of primary teeth impair mastication in young children? A) Tongue
compensates fully B) Occlusal function is reduced during chewing C) Saliva increases
D) Permanent molars erupt immediately - Answer- B) Occlusal function is reduced
during chewing
Why can untreated ECC negatively affect a child's self-esteem? A) Children are
unaware of appearance B) Speech improves C) Pain enhances resilience D) Visible
decay affects psychosocial development - Answer- D) Visible decay affects
psychosocial development
Why is the belief that "baby teeth don't matter" clinically dangerous? A) Primary teeth
influence long-term oral health outcomes B) They never become infected C) They
exfoliate within months D) They do not affect nutrition - Answer- A) Primary teeth
influence long-term oral health outcomes
, Why do parents often delay seeking dental care until symptoms appear? A) Preventive
dentistry is ineffective B) Access is universal C) Caries is often asymptomatic early D)
Children report pain early - Answer- C) Caries is often asymptomatic early
What was a defining limitation of historical pediatric dental advice regarding fluoride? A)
Overprescription B) Delayed use until children could spit C) Excessive topical
application D) Universal supplementation - Answer- B) Delayed use until children could
spit
Why is extraction-only management of carious primary teeth now considered
inappropriate? A) It is too expensive B) Children tolerate pain well C) Primary teeth
regenerate D) It ignores disease control and developmental consequences - Answer- D)
It ignores disease control and developmental consequences
Why is modern caries management focused on arresting disease progression rather
than waiting for pain? A) Caries is a bacterial infection that worsens without intervention
B) Pain predicts severity C) Restorations cure infection D) Enamel remineralizes
automatically - Answer- A) Caries is a bacterial infection that worsens without
intervention
Why is caries risk assessment essential before selecting treatment? A) All children
receive the same care B) Risk determines intensity and modality of intervention C) Age
alone predicts outcome D) Restorations eliminate bacteria - Answer- B) Risk determines
intensity and modality of intervention
Why is the dental office considered a high-risk environment for pathogen transmission?
A) Children are immunocompromised B) Saliva is sterile C) Gloves reduce tactile
sensation D) The oral cavity contains diverse bacteria and viruses - Answer- D) The oral
cavity contains diverse bacteria and viruses
Why is bacterial colonization possible even before tooth eruption? A) Enamel is present
prenatally B) Bacteria require diet only C) Soft tissues can harbor oral microbes D)
Teeth erupt sterile permanently - Answer- C) Soft tissues can harbor oral microbes
Which element of the caries model represents patient susceptibility? A) Substrate B)
Host factors C) Time D) Bacteria - Answer- B) Host factors
Why does frequent carbohydrate intake increase caries risk more than total quantity
alone? A) It prolongs acidic conditions at the tooth surface B) Sugar type is irrelevant C)
Saliva becomes alkaline D) Fluoride is deactivated - Answer- A) It prolongs acidic
conditions at the tooth surface
Why does biofilm maturation increase resistance to caries control measures? A)
Bacteria die off B) Fluoride becomes toxic C) Saliva penetrates better D) Structured
biofilms resist buffering and disruption - Answer- D) Structured biofilms resist buffering
and disruption