Wiener R C, Shen C, Findley P A, Dwibedi N, Sambamoorthi U
Department of Dental Practice and Rural Health, School of Dentistry, 104A HSC Addition, PO Box 9448, West Virginia University Morgantown.
Departments of Health Services Research and Biostatistics University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center 1400 Pressler St, Houston.
Community Dent Health. 2018 Aug 30;35(3):179-185. doi: 10.1922/CDH_4304Weiner07.
Depression has been linked to poor oral health among patients seeking dental care. However, systematic research on the relationship between depressive symptoms and oral health is limited.
To examine the association of depressive symptoms with untreated dental caries among adults aged 21-64 years.
Cross-sectional secondary analysis.
The data were extracted national data collected in the United States (2013-2014 National Health Nutrition and Examination Survey).
The sample consisted of 3,127 non-institutionalized civilians.
Untreated coronal dental caries (yes, no) was the key outcome variable. Depressive symptom categories (none, moderate, and severe) were derived from the Patient Health Questionnaire-9 Depression Scale.
In the study sample, 33.4% of adults had untreated coronal dental caries. Most participants (77.9%) did not report depressive symptoms; 13.9% had mild and 8.2% had moderate or severe depressive symptoms. In unadjusted analyses, individuals with mild (Odds Ratio = 1.62 [95% CI: 1.26, 2.08] and moderate/severe depressive symptoms (Odds Ratio = 2.70 [95% CI: 1.81, 4.02]) were more likely to have untreated coronal caries as compared with individuals without depressive symptoms. When sex, race, age, education, family income-to-poverty ratio, dental visits, history of previous dental restorations, health insurance, and smoking were included into the model, the associations were no longer statistically significant (1.27 [95% CI: 0.96, 1.69] and 1.61 [95% CI: 0.95, 2.73], respectively).
The relationship between depressive symptoms and untreated coronal dental caries failed to remain significant after the addition of tobacco usage in the analysis.
在寻求牙科护理的患者中,抑郁症与口腔健康状况不佳有关。然而,关于抑郁症状与口腔健康之间关系的系统性研究有限。
研究21至64岁成年人中抑郁症状与未治疗龋齿之间的关联。
横断面二次分析。
数据提取自美国收集的全国性数据(2013 - 2014年国家健康与营养检查调查)。
样本包括3127名非机构化平民。
未治疗的冠部龋齿(是,否)是关键结局变量。抑郁症状类别(无、轻度、中度和重度)源自患者健康问卷 - 9抑郁量表。
在研究样本中,33.4%的成年人有未治疗的冠部龋齿。大多数参与者(77.9%)未报告有抑郁症状;13.9%有轻度抑郁症状,8.2%有中度或重度抑郁症状。在未调整分析中,与无抑郁症状的个体相比,有轻度(优势比 = 1.62 [95%置信区间:1.26, 2.08])和中度/重度抑郁症状(优势比 = 2.70 [95%置信区间:1.81, 4.02])的个体更有可能有未治疗的冠部龋齿。当将性别、种族、年龄、教育程度、家庭收入与贫困比率、牙科就诊次数、既往牙齿修复史、健康保险和吸烟情况纳入模型后,这些关联不再具有统计学意义(分别为1.27 [95%置信区间:0.96, 1.69]和1.61 [95%置信区间:0.95, 2.73])。
在分析中加入烟草使用情况后,抑郁症状与未治疗的冠部龋齿之间的关系不再显著。