Submitted:
02 June 2026
Posted:
03 June 2026
You are already at the latest version
Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
2. Methods
3. A Causal-Translation Framework for ECC Research
| Domain | Core question | Typical evidence | Common risk of overinterpretation |
| Association | Is exposure X linked to ECC? | Cross-sectional, case-control, cohort studies | Treating correlation as causation |
| Mechanism | How might X influence disease biology? | Laboratory, enamel, saliva, microbiome, immunology studies | Assuming biological plausibility proves clinical causation |
| Causation | Does changing X alter ECC risk? | RCTs, Mendelian randomization, target-trial emulation, strong longitudinal designs | Ignoring null or uncertain causal evidence |
| Consequence | What happens after severe ECC develops? | GA outcomes, quality-of-life studies, cost studies | Treating burden documentation as etiological insight |
| Disease control | Can existing lesions be arrested or stabilized? | SDF trials, fluoride trials, interim therapeutic studies | Treating lesion arrest as disease resolution |
| Policy translation | How should interventions be delivered safely and equitably? | Guidelines, implementation studies, health-system evaluations | Replacing comprehensive care with simplified delivery models |
4. Vitamin D and ECC: Association Is Not Prevention
5. Dental Rehabilitation Under General Anesthesia: Consequence, Not Etiology
6. The Oral Microbiome: Description Requires Temporality
7. Silver Diamine Fluoride: Evidence-Supported Arrest, Not Etiological Resolution
8. Discussion: The Problem Is Not Research Diversity, but Causal Disconnection
9. Recommendations for a Stronger ECC Research Agenda
10. Conclusion
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