Institute of Clinical Dentistry, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
BMC Oral Health. 2012 Mar 23;12:8. doi: 10.1186/1472-6831-12-8.
Little attention has been directed towards identifying the relationship between physical exercise, dental erosive wear and salivary secretion. The study aimed i) to describe the prevalence and severity of dental erosive wear among a group of physically active young adults, ii) to describe the patterns of dietary consumption and lifestyle among these individuals and iii) to study possible effect of exercise on salivary flow rate.
Young members (age range 18-32 years) of a fitness-centre were invited to participate in the study. Inclusion criteria were healthy young adults training hard at least twice a week. A non-exercising comparison group was selected from an ongoing study among 18-year-olds. Two hundred and twenty participants accepted an intraoral examination and completed a questionnaire. Seventy of the exercising participants provided saliva samples. The examination was performed at the fitness-centre or at a dental clinic (comparison group), using tested erosive wear system (VEDE). Saliva sampling (unstimulated and stimulated) was performed before and after exercise. Occlusal surfaces of the first molars in both jaws and the labial and palatal surfaces of the upper incisors and canines were selected as index teeth.
Dental erosive wear was registered in 64% of the exercising participants, more often in the older age group, and in 20% of the comparison group. Enamel lesions were most observed in the upper central incisors (33%); dentine lesions in lower first molar (27%). One fourth of the participants had erosive wear into dentine, significantly more in males than in females (p = 0.047). More participants with erosive wear had decreased salivary flow during exercise compared with the non-erosion group (p < 0.01). The stimulated salivary flow rate was in the lower rage (≤ 1 ml/min) among more than one third of the participants, and more erosive lesions were registered than in subjects with higher flow rates (p < 0.01).
The study showed that a high proportion of physically active young adults have erosive lesions and indicate that hard exercise and decreased stimulated salivary flow rate may be associated with such wear.
人们很少关注体育锻炼、牙酸蚀磨损和唾液分泌之间的关系。本研究旨在:i)描述一群活跃的年轻成年人中牙酸蚀磨损的流行程度和严重程度,ii)描述这些个体的饮食消费和生活方式模式,iii)研究运动对唾液流量的可能影响。
健身中心的年轻成员(年龄在 18-32 岁之间)受邀参加研究。纳入标准为每周至少两次高强度训练的健康年轻成年人。从正在进行的 18 岁年轻人研究中选择非运动对照组。220 名参与者接受了口腔检查并完成了问卷调查。70 名运动参与者提供了唾液样本。检查在健身中心或牙科诊所(对照组)进行,使用经过测试的酸蚀磨损系统(VEDE)。在运动前后进行唾液取样(非刺激和刺激)。选择上下颌第一磨牙的咬合面、上颌切牙和尖牙的唇面和腭面作为指数牙。
64%的运动参与者有牙酸蚀磨损,年龄较大组更为常见,对照组为 20%。釉质病变最常见于上颌中切牙(33%);牙本质病变最常见于下颌第一磨牙(27%)。四分之一的参与者有牙本质酸蚀磨损,男性明显多于女性(p=0.047)。与无磨损组相比,运动时出现唾液流量减少的参与者更多(p<0.01)。三分之一以上的参与者刺激唾液流量处于较低范围(≤1ml/min),且登记的酸蚀病变多于流量较高者(p<0.01)。
本研究表明,相当一部分活跃的年轻成年人有酸蚀病变,表明剧烈运动和刺激唾液流量减少可能与这种磨损有关。