Emily Amezdroz
University of Melbourne
6 Papers
19 Citations
Emily Amezdroz is an academic researcher from University of Melbourne. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Early childhood caries. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 6 publications. Previous affiliations of Emily Amezdroz include University of New South Wales.
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Papers
Temporal development of the oral microbiome and prediction of early childhood caries.
Stuart G. Dashper,H. L. Mitchell,K.-A. Lê Cao,Lauren Carpenter,Mark Gussy,Hanny Calache,Simon Gladman,Dieter M. Bulach,Benjamin D. Hoffmann,Deanne V. Catmull,S. Pruilh,Shae Johnson,Lisa Gibbs,Emily Amezdroz,U. Bhatnagar,Torsten Seemann,George Mnatzaganian,David J. Manton,Eric C. Reynolds +18 more
TL;DR: This study demonstrates an ordered temporal development of the oral microbiome, describes a limited core oral microbiome and indicates that saliva testing of infants may help predict ECC risk.
Identifying predictors of early childhood caries among Australian children using sequential modelling: Findings from the VicGen birth cohort study.
Mark Gussy,Mark Gussy,George Mnatzaganian,Stuart G. Dashper,Lauren Carpenter,Hanny Calache,Helen L. Mitchell,Eric C. Reynolds,Lisa Gibbs,Shalika Hegde,Geoff Adams,Shae Johnson,Emily Amezdroz,Bradley Christian +13 more
TL;DR: At an individual and family level these risk factors should be incorporated into caries risk assessment tools for more precise identification of risk and evidence-informed interventions by health professionals.
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Transition from milks to the introduction of solid foods across the first 2 years of life: findings from an Australian birth cohort study.
TL;DR: A number of findings outside the recommendations of the Australian Dietary and Infant Feeding Guidelines are identified and further work is warranted to explore these outcomes.
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Feasibility and development of a cariogenic diet scale for epidemiological research.
Emily Amezdroz,Lauren Carpenter,Shae Johnson,Victoria M Flood,Victoria M Flood,Stuart G. Dashper,Hanny Calache,Mark Gussy,Mark Gussy,Elizabeth Waters +9 more
TL;DR: The cariogenic diet scale provides a useful indication of the increasing cariogenicity of children's diets with age and highlights the incorporation of discretionary choice foods and beverages into the diets of young children much earlier than nutritionally recommended.