Kosaka Takayuki, Ono Takahiro, Fushida Shuri, Kida Momoyo, Nokubi Takashi, Kokubo Yoshihiro, Watanabe Makoto, Miyamoto Yoshihiro, Ikebe Kazunori
Department of Removable Prosthodontics and Gerodontology, Osaka University Graduate School of Dentistry, Suita, Japan.
Department of Geriatric Dentistry, Osaka Dental University, Osaka, Japan.
J Oral Rehabil. 2025 May;52(5):624-631. doi: 10.1111/joor.13940. Epub 2025 Jan 14.
Smoking is presumed to cause a decline in masticatory performance by worsening the intraoral environment in various ways. However, no longitudinal study has examined the relationship between smoking and masticatory performance.
To clarify how smoking affects future decline in masticatory performance through a 5-year follow-up study of a general urban population.
The study participants were 494 men (mean age at baseline: 65.8 years) who participated in baseline and follow-up dental examinations in the Suita Study. The masticatory performance of the participants was evaluated using a test gummy jelly. The rate of change in masticatory performance during the follow-up period was calculated by subtracting the masticatory performance at baseline from the masticatory performance at follow-up and dividing this by the masticatory performance at baseline. Logistic regression analysis was performed, with the presence or absence of a decline in masticatory performance as the objective variable and age at baseline, number of functional teeth, periodontal status, salivary flow rate, maximum bite force, smoking status, utilisation of dental services, and follow-up years as the explanatory variables.
The rate of change in masticatory performance during the follow-up period was significantly higher in smokers than in non-smokers. Logistic regression analysis showed that age, maximum bite force, and smoking were significant explanatory variables for a decline in masticatory performance.
A 5-year follow-up study showed that smoking causes a decline in masticatory performance in men, even after adjusting for confounding factors.
吸烟被认为会通过多种方式恶化口腔内环境,从而导致咀嚼功能下降。然而,尚无纵向研究探讨吸烟与咀嚼功能之间的关系。
通过对一般城市人群进行为期5年的随访研究,阐明吸烟如何影响未来咀嚼功能的下降。
研究参与者为494名男性(基线时平均年龄:65.8岁),他们参加了吹田研究中的基线和随访牙科检查。使用测试软糖评估参与者的咀嚼功能。随访期间咀嚼功能的变化率通过以下方式计算:用随访时的咀嚼功能减去基线时的咀嚼功能,再除以基线时的咀嚼功能。进行逻辑回归分析,以咀嚼功能是否下降为目标变量,以基线年龄、功能牙数量、牙周状况、唾液流速、最大咬合力、吸烟状况、牙科服务利用情况和随访年限为解释变量。
随访期间,吸烟者咀嚼功能的变化率显著高于非吸烟者。逻辑回归分析表明,年龄、最大咬合力和吸烟是咀嚼功能下降的显著解释变量。
一项为期5年的随访研究表明,即使在调整混杂因素后,吸烟仍会导致男性咀嚼功能下降。