Schulze Antina, Busse Martin
General Outpatient Ambulance and Sports Dentistry of the Institute of Sports Medicine, University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany.
Open Dent J. 2016 Jun 9;10:287-97. doi: 10.2174/1874210601610010287. eCollection 2016.
This study investigated gender dependent differences by the comparison of periodontal status and oral hygiene between diabetic patients and non-diabetic subjects.
517 mostly obese subjects (171 non-diabetic, 205 type 2 diabetic with oral and 141 with insulin therapy; mean: 59 years) completed an oral hygiene questionnaire and had a clinical examination, including periodontal screening and recording (PSR), percentage of bleeding teeth (PBT), probing pocket depth (PD), gingivitis index (GI), and number of teeth (Tn). Main parameters were "periodontitis" and "oral hygiene behaviour", each defined by 5 sub-parameters. For a comparison of all results, each sub-parameter was set 0.2. The "low performance index" (LoP) was the sum of significantly worse sub-parameters in the compared groups (maximum of low performing = 1.0).
Gender comparison: In non-diabetic and diabetic patients with oral medication, males performed worse (LoP: periodontitis 0.6 - 0.8; oral hygiene 0.4 - 0.6). The male insulin group performed worse oral hygiene (LoP: 0.4) than females with insulin therapy, whereas the periodontal status showed no difference. Diabetic and non-diabetic groups: Females: Diabetic groups performed worse than non-diabetics (LoP: periodontitis 0.2 - 1.0; oral hygiene 0.4). Insulin patients had worse periodontal status and showed no difference in oral hygiene when compared to diabetic patients with oral medication (LoP: 0.2). Males: Diabetic group with oral medication had worse periodontal status than non-diabetics (LoP: 0.6).
The periodontal status was mainly due to oral hygiene behaviour, which was worse in men. Apparently behaviour and not diabetes is the major determinant of periodontitis. Men apparently need much more advise than women.
本研究通过比较糖尿病患者和非糖尿病受试者的牙周状况及口腔卫生情况,调查性别差异。
517名大多为肥胖的受试者(171名非糖尿病患者、205名接受口服药物治疗的2型糖尿病患者以及141名接受胰岛素治疗的患者;平均年龄59岁)完成了一份口腔卫生调查问卷,并接受了临床检查,包括牙周筛查与记录(PSR)、出血牙百分比(PBT)、探诊深度(PD)、牙龈炎指数(GI)以及牙数(Tn)。主要参数为“牙周炎”和“口腔卫生行为”,每个参数由5个子参数定义。为比较所有结果,每个子参数设定为0.2。“低表现指数”(LoP)为比较组中显著较差子参数的总和(低表现最大值=1.0)。
性别比较:在非糖尿病患者以及接受口服药物治疗的糖尿病患者中,男性表现较差(LoP:牙周炎0.6 - 0.8;口腔卫生0.4 - 0.6)。接受胰岛素治疗的男性组口腔卫生表现比接受胰岛素治疗的女性组差(LoP:0.4),而牙周状况无差异。糖尿病组与非糖尿病组:女性:糖尿病组表现比非糖尿病组差(LoP:牙周炎0.2 - 1.0;口腔卫生0.4)。与接受口服药物治疗的糖尿病患者相比,接受胰岛素治疗的患者牙周状况更差,口腔卫生无差异(LoP:0.2)。男性:接受口服药物治疗的糖尿病组牙周状况比非糖尿病组差(LoP:0.6)。
牙周状况主要归因于口腔卫生行为,男性的口腔卫生行为更差。显然,行为而非糖尿病是牙周炎的主要决定因素。男性显然比女性需要更多的建议。