性别差异与龋齿发病情况:临床证据,复杂病因。
Sex differences in dental caries experience: clinical evidence, complex etiology.
机构信息
Department of Anthropology, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403, USA.
出版信息
Clin Oral Investig. 2011 Oct;15(5):649-56. doi: 10.1007/s00784-010-0445-3. Epub 2010 Jul 21.
A sex difference in oral health has been widely documented through time and across cultures. Women's oral health declines more rapidly than men's with the onset of agriculture and the associated rise in fertility. The magnitude of this disparity in oral health by sex increases during ontogeny: from childhood, to adolescence, and through the reproductive years. Representative studies of sex differences in caries, tooth loss, and periodontal disease are critically reviewed. Surveys conducted in Hungary, India, and in an isolated traditional Brazilian sample provide additional support for a significant sex bias in dental caries, especially in mature adults. Compounding hormonal and reproductive factors, the sex difference in oral health in India appears to involve social and religious causes such as son preference, ritual fasting, and dietary restrictions during pregnancy. Like the sex difference in caries, tooth loss in women is greater than in men and has been linked to caries and parity. Results of genome wide association studies have found caries susceptible and caries protective loci that influence variation in taste, saliva, and enamel proteins, affecting the oral environment and the micro-structure of enamel. Genetic variation, some of which is X-linked, may partly explain how sex differences in oral health originate. A primary, but neglected, factor in explaining the sex differential in oral health is the complex and synergistic changes associated with female sex hormones, pregnancy, and women's reproductive life history. Caries etiology is complex and impacts understanding of the sex difference in oral health. Both biological (genetics, hormones, and reproductive history) and anthropological (behavioral) factors such culture-based division of labor and gender-based dietary preferences play a role.
口腔健康的性别差异在时间和文化上都有广泛的记载。随着农业的出现和生育率的上升,女性的口腔健康比男性下降得更快。这种性别在口腔健康方面的差异在个体发育过程中会增大:从儿童期、青春期到生殖期。对龋齿、牙齿缺失和牙周病的性别差异的代表性研究进行了批判性审查。在匈牙利、印度和一个孤立的巴西传统样本中进行的调查为龋齿方面的显著性别偏差提供了额外的支持,尤其是在成年期。除了激素和生殖因素外,印度的口腔健康性别差异似乎还涉及到社会和宗教因素,如男孩偏好、仪式禁食和怀孕期间的饮食限制。与龋齿一样,女性的牙齿缺失比男性更为严重,而且与龋齿和生育次数有关。全基因组关联研究的结果发现了一些与龋齿相关的易感和保护基因座,这些基因座影响味觉、唾液和牙釉质蛋白的变异,从而影响口腔环境和牙釉质的微观结构。遗传变异,其中一些与 X 染色体有关,可能部分解释了口腔健康性别差异的起源。一个主要但被忽视的因素是与女性性激素、怀孕和女性生殖史相关的复杂和协同变化。龋齿病因复杂,影响对口腔健康性别差异的理解。生物学因素(遗传、激素和生殖史)和人类学因素(行为),如基于文化的劳动分工和基于性别的饮食偏好,都发挥了作用。