Adams School of Dentistry, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
Department of Health Outcomes and Biomedical Informatics and Pediatrics, University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville, FL, USA.
J Public Health Dent. 2020 Jun;80(2):140-149. doi: 10.1111/jphd.12358. Epub 2020 Feb 7.
Fermentable carbohydrate is universally recognized as the major dietary risk factor for dental caries. We assessed the broader relationship between diet quality and dental caries in a diverse Latinx adult population.
In a cross-sectional probability sample, 14,517 dentate men and women in the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos (HCHS/SOL) received a dental examination and completed two 24-hours dietary recalls and a food propensity questionnaire. The 2010 Alternative Healthy Eating Index (AHEI) assessed diet quality and the National Cancer Institute method predicted usual intake of the 11 dietary components that comprise the AHEI. Dental caries experience was quantified using the decayed, missing and filled surfaces (DMFS) index. Covariates included sociodemographic and anthropometric characteristics. Survey multivariable-adjusted linear regression models quantified the relationship of 2010 AHEI score, and its 11 components, with DMFS.
In multivariable-adjusted models, each 10-unit increase in diet quality score was associated with 2.5 fewer (95% confidence interval: -3.4, -1.6) DMFS. The relationship was pronounced among foreign-born individuals, who comprised three-quarters of the sample, irrespective of their length of US residence, but was not apparent among U.S.-born individuals. Greater intake of sugar-sweetened beverage and fruit juice was positively associated with dental caries, whereas vegetables (excluding potatoes); whole grains; and omega-3 fats were inversely associated with dental caries, independent of covariates and the other dietary components (all P < 0.05).
An association between diet quality and dental caries was restricted to foreign-born Latinix and was not limited to the adverse impact of sugar-sweetened drinks.
可发酵碳水化合物被普遍认为是导致龋齿的主要饮食风险因素。我们在一个多样化的拉丁裔成年人人群中评估了饮食质量与龋齿之间更广泛的关系。
在一项横断面概率抽样中,西班牙裔社区健康研究/拉丁裔研究(HCHS/SOL)中 14517 名有牙的男性和女性接受了牙科检查,并完成了两次 24 小时饮食回忆和一份食物倾向问卷。2010 年替代健康饮食指数(AHEI)评估了饮食质量,国家癌症研究所的方法预测了构成 AHEI 的 11 种饮食成分的通常摄入量。龋齿经历使用龋失补牙面(DMFS)指数进行量化。协变量包括社会人口统计学和人体测量特征。调查多变量调整线性回归模型量化了 2010 年 AHEI 评分及其 11 个成分与 DMFS 的关系。
在多变量调整模型中,饮食质量评分每增加 10 个单位,与 DMFS 减少 2.5 个(95%置信区间:-3.4,-1.6)相关。这种关系在四分之三的样本中是显著的,这些样本都是出生在国外的个体,无论他们在美国居住的时间长短,但在美国出生的个体中并不明显。摄入更多的含糖饮料和果汁与龋齿呈正相关,而蔬菜(不包括土豆);全谷物;和欧米伽-3 脂肪与龋齿呈负相关,独立于协变量和其他饮食成分(均 P < 0.05)。
饮食质量与龋齿之间的关联仅限于出生在国外的拉丁裔,并且不限于含糖饮料的不利影响。