Research and Development Department, Sunstar Inc., Takatsuki, Osaka, Japan.
Department of Medicine, Shiga University of Medical Science, Otsu, Shiga, Japan.
PLoS One. 2022 Sep 14;17(9):e0274465. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0274465. eCollection 2022.
Tooth loss is associated with nutritional status and significantly affects quality of life, particularly in older individuals. To date, several studies reveal that a high BMI is associated with tooth loss. However, there is a lack of large-scale studies that examined the impact of obesity on residual teeth with respect to age and tooth positions.
We assessed the impact of obesity on the number and position of residual teeth by age groups using large scale of Japanese database.
This was a cross-sectional study of 706150 subjects that were included in the database that combined the data from health insurance claims and health check-up, those lacking information about BMI, HbA1c level, smoking status, and the number of residual teeth were excluded. Thus, a total of 233517 aged 20-74 years were included. Subjects were classified into 4 categories based on BMI, and the number of teeth was compared between age-groups. The percentage of subjects with residual teeth in each position was compared between groups with obesity (BMI ≥25.0 kg/m2) and non-obesity. Logistic regression analysis was performed to clarify whether obesity predicts having <24 teeth.
Higher BMI was associated with fewer teeth over 40s (P for trend <0.0001 when <70s). Obesity was associated with the reduction of residual teeth in the maxillary; specifically, the molars were affected over the age 30. Smoking status further affected tooth loss at positions that were not affected by obesity alone. After adjusting for age, sex, smoking status, and HbA1c ≥6.5%, obesity remained an independent predictive factor for having <24 teeth (ORs: 1.35, 95% CIs: 1.30-1.40).
We found that an increase in BMI was associated with a decrease in the number of residual teeth from younger ages independently of smoking status and diabetes in the large scale of Japanese database.
牙齿缺失与营养状况有关,严重影响生活质量,尤其是老年人。迄今为止,多项研究表明,较高的 BMI 与牙齿缺失有关。然而,缺乏大规模研究来检查肥胖对与年龄和牙齿位置相关的剩余牙齿的影响。
我们使用大规模的日本数据库评估肥胖对按年龄分组的剩余牙齿数量和位置的影响。
这是一项横断面研究,共纳入数据库中 706150 名受试者的数据,这些数据来自健康保险索赔和健康检查,排除了 BMI、HbA1c 水平、吸烟状况和剩余牙齿数量信息缺失的受试者。因此,共纳入了 233517 名 20-74 岁的受试者。根据 BMI 将受试者分为 4 类,并比较了各年龄组的牙齿数量。比较了肥胖组(BMI≥25.0kg/m2)和非肥胖组中各位置剩余牙齿的比例。采用 logistic 回归分析明确肥胖是否预测存在<24 颗牙齿。
较高的 BMI 与 40 岁以上人群的牙齿数量减少有关(<70 岁时,趋势 P<0.0001)。肥胖与上颌剩余牙齿减少有关,尤其是 30 岁以上的磨牙。吸烟状况进一步影响了肥胖单独未影响的位置的牙齿缺失。在校正年龄、性别、吸烟状况和 HbA1c≥6.5%后,肥胖仍然是存在<24 颗牙齿的独立预测因素(ORs:1.35,95%CI:1.30-1.40)。
我们发现,在大规模的日本数据库中,BMI 的增加与剩余牙齿数量的减少独立相关,与吸烟状况和糖尿病无关。