El Masri Jad, Al Malak Ahmad, El Masri Diala, Ghazi Maya, Al Boussi Silva, El Masri Yasmina, Hassoun Mohammad, Tlayss Maryam, Salameh Pascale, Hosseini Hassan
INSERM U955-E01, Institut Mondor de Recherche Biomédicale (IMRB), Université Paris-Est Créteil, 94010 Créteil, France.
École Doctorale Sciences de la Vie et de la Santé, Université Paris-Est Créteil, 94010 Créteil, France.
Brain Sci. 2024 Dec 26;15(1):10. doi: 10.3390/brainsci15010010.
Cerebrovascular diseases (CVAs) have several risk factors that are categorized as modifiable and nonmodifiable. Periodontal diseases (PD) have a modifiable role in causing CVA, where several studies suggested direct or indirect correlations with systemic diseases. This study aims to summarize, evaluate and analyze all the evidence available in literature, to reach a better understanding of the relation between periodontitis, gingivitis, tooth loss and CVA.
PubMed, Cochrane, Scopus and Web of Science databases were searched for all meta-analyses assessing the effect of PD on CVA in accordance with Joanna Briggs Institute guidance for umbrella reviews in March 2024. Assessment of Multiple Systematic Reviews (AMSTAR) was used for quality assessment. Pooled analysis was performed to assess the effect of periodontitis, gingivitis and tooth loss on CVA, depending on the availability of data using Review Manager Version 5.2.11.
Seven of the identified meta-analyses were of high quality, and they were distributed in different countries. Periodontitis was generally associated with a significant increase in CVA risk (OR = 2.32, 95% CI: 1.70, 3.17, < 0.00001 and RR = 1.22, 95% CI: 1.15-1.29, < 0.00001), same as tooth loss, but to a lower degree (0.78). However, the effect of gingivitis was insignificant in terms of CVA (RR = 1.32, 95% CI: 1.12-1.56, = 0.0008).
This study confirms the effect of periodontitis and tooth loss on CVA, disregarding any significant role for gingivitis. The relation reached favors the suggested role of some inflammatory changes in the pathogenic pathway leading to atherosclerotic changes.
脑血管疾病(CVA)有多种风险因素,可分为可改变和不可改变的因素。牙周疾病(PD)在导致CVA方面具有可改变的作用,多项研究表明其与全身性疾病存在直接或间接关联。本研究旨在总结、评估和分析文献中所有可用证据,以更好地理解牙周炎、牙龈炎、牙齿缺失与CVA之间的关系。
根据乔安娜·布里格斯研究所2024年3月伞状综述指南,在PubMed、Cochrane、Scopus和科学网数据库中检索所有评估PD对CVA影响的荟萃分析。使用多系统评价评估(AMSTAR)进行质量评估。根据数据可用性,使用Review Manager 5.2.11版进行汇总分析,以评估牙周炎、牙龈炎和牙齿缺失对CVA的影响。
所识别的荟萃分析中有七项质量较高,分布在不同国家。牙周炎通常与CVA风险显著增加相关(比值比[OR]=2.32,95%置信区间[CI]:1.70,3.17,P<0.00001;相对危险度[RR]=1.22,95%CI:1.15 - 1.29,P<0.00001),牙齿缺失情况相同,但程度较低(0.78)。然而,就CVA而言,牙龈炎的影响不显著(RR = 1.32,95%CI:1.12 - 1.56,P = 0.0008)。
本研究证实了牙周炎和牙齿缺失对CVA的影响,而未发现牙龈炎有任何显著作用。所达成的这种关系支持了某些炎症变化在导致动脉粥样硬化变化的致病途径中所起的作用。