Joshipura K, Ritchie C, Douglass C
Department of Oral Health Policy and Epidemiology, Harvard School of Dental Medicine, Department of Epidemiology, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Compend Contin Educ Dent Suppl. 2000(30):12-23; quiz 65.
Associations between dental diseases and systemic outcomes are potentially important because of the high occurrence of dental diseases. If this extremely common source of chronic infection (dental disease) leads to an increased morbidity and mortality rate, the public health impact of oral disease on millions of Americans would be substantial. Recent studies demonstrate an association between dental and systemic diseases, including systemic infections, cardiovascular disease, pregnancy outcomes, respiratory diseases, and increased all-cause mortality rate. Because there are several common risk factors for oral and systemic diseases, and limitations in published studies, a careful interpretation is needed. Confounding (shared risk factors for both systemic and dental disease) may explain part of the reported associations. It is also plausible that there may be a causal link. It is likely that if there is a causal link, several pathways and mediators coexist, linking oral and systemic disease. Bacteremia, bacterial endotoxins, cytokines, and other inflammatory mediators could conceivably be playing a direct or indirect role. Missing teeth are a surrogate marker for previous dental infection, and may also lead to altered dietary intake. Hence, diet may be an additional mediator for several of these outcomes. We caution clinicians not to recommend extracting infected teeth, based on the periodontal-systemic disease associations, if the teeth do not warrant extraction otherwise, because loss of teeth and edentulousness are associated with increased risk of systemic diseases. When assessed against causal-defined criteria, the evidence suggests possible causal associations between chronic periodontal disease and tooth loss with cardiovascular disease, bacterial endocarditis, pregnancy outcomes, and all-cause overall mortality. Further studies are needed to show consistency, to corroborate that the associations are independent of common risk factors for both systemic and dental disease, including healthy lifestyle factors, and to evaluate different biological pathways.
由于牙科疾病的高发性,牙科疾病与全身健康结果之间的关联可能具有重要意义。如果这种极为常见的慢性感染源(牙科疾病)导致发病率和死亡率上升,那么口腔疾病对数百万美国人的公共卫生影响将是巨大的。最近的研究表明牙科疾病与全身疾病之间存在关联,包括全身感染、心血管疾病、妊娠结局、呼吸系统疾病以及全因死亡率上升。由于口腔疾病和全身疾病存在若干共同的风险因素,且已发表的研究存在局限性,因此需要谨慎解读。混杂因素(全身疾病和牙科疾病的共同风险因素)可能可以解释部分所报道的关联。也有可能存在因果联系。如果存在因果联系,很可能有多种途径和介质共同存在,将口腔疾病和全身疾病联系起来。菌血症、细菌内毒素、细胞因子和其他炎症介质可能直接或间接地发挥作用。缺牙是既往牙科感染的替代标志物,也可能导致饮食摄入改变。因此,饮食可能是这些结果中若干结果的另一个介质。我们提醒临床医生,如果牙齿没有其他拔除指征,基于牙周病与全身疾病的关联而建议拔除感染牙齿是不可取的,因为牙齿缺失和无牙状态与全身疾病风险增加有关。根据因果关系明确的标准进行评估时,有证据表明慢性牙周病和牙齿缺失与心血管疾病、细菌性心内膜炎、妊娠结局以及全因总死亡率之间可能存在因果关联。需要进一步研究以证明其一致性,证实这些关联独立于全身疾病和牙科疾病的共同风险因素,包括健康的生活方式因素,并评估不同的生物学途径。