Pi Jingting, Wang Zhi, Song Lin, Deng Xia, He Xiaoli, Sun Deping
Department of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery, The Affiliated Yongchuan Hospital of Chongqing Medical University, Chongqing, China.
Department of Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery, Liangping District of Chongqing Chinese Medicine Hospital, Chongqing, China.
Int Dent J. 2025 Aug 18;75(5):100947. doi: 10.1016/j.identj.2025.100947.
The study aimed to explore the relationship between tooth count and sleep quality and duration in the elderly, investigating the potential mediating role of temporomandibular joint (TMJ) pain in this relationship.
Using data from the China Health and Longevity Longitudinal Survey (CLHLS), a cohort analysis was conducted on 5941 older Chinese adults. Multivariate linear regression and mediation analysis were applied to assess the associations, adjusting for sociodemographic factors, health behaviours, and comorbidities.
The participants had a mean natural tooth count of 10.1 (SD = 10.4), a mean sleep quality score of 2.38 (SD = 0.93; lower scores indicate better quality), and a TMJ pain prevalence of 6.93%. Linear regression showed that more natural teeth were associated with better sleep quality (coefficient = -0.0036, P = .012), meaning each additional tooth correlated with a small improvement in sleep quality. TMJ pain was linked to poorer sleep quality (coefficient = 0.2175, P < .001), indicating worse sleep in those with TMJ pain. Mediation analysis revealed that TMJ pain partially mediated the relationship: the indirect effect (average causal mediation effect [ACME] = 0.0004, 95% CI: 0.0002 to 0.0005, P < .001) accounted for 11.5% of the total effect, while the direct effect of tooth count on sleep quality remained significant (ADE = -0.0039, P = .006).
More natural teeth are associated with better sleep quality in older adults, and TMJ pain partially mediates this relationship.
These findings highlight the importance of oral health (tooth retention and TMJ pain management) in improving sleep quality among older adults, providing new insights for clinical intervention in sleep disorders.
本研究旨在探讨老年人牙齿数量与睡眠质量及时长之间的关系,并研究颞下颌关节(TMJ)疼痛在这种关系中可能的中介作用。
利用中国健康与养老追踪调查(CLHLS)的数据,对5941名中国老年人进行队列分析。应用多元线性回归和中介分析来评估关联,并对社会人口学因素、健康行为和合并症进行了调整。
参与者的天然牙平均数量为10.1颗(标准差=10.4),平均睡眠质量评分为2.38(标准差=0.93;分数越低表明质量越好),TMJ疼痛患病率为6.93%。线性回归显示,天然牙越多与睡眠质量越好相关(系数=-0.0036,P=0.012),即每多一颗牙,睡眠质量就有小幅改善。TMJ疼痛与较差的睡眠质量相关(系数=0.2175,P<0.001),表明有TMJ疼痛的人睡眠更差。中介分析表明,TMJ疼痛部分介导了这种关系:间接效应(平均因果中介效应[ACME]=0.0004,95%置信区间:0.0002至0.0005,P<0.001)占总效应的11.5%,而牙齿数量对睡眠质量的直接效应仍然显著(ADE=-0.0039,P=0.006)。
老年人天然牙越多,睡眠质量越好,且TMJ疼痛部分介导了这种关系。
这些发现突出了口腔健康(牙齿保留和TMJ疼痛管理)在改善老年人睡眠质量方面的重要性,为睡眠障碍的临床干预提供了新的见解。