Alshanbari Mohammed H, Cheney Amanda M, Alhazmi Hesham A, Bouldin Erin D
Department of Health Management and Medical Informatics, Health Sciences College at Al-Leith, Umm Al-Qura University, Prince Sultan Road, Makkah, 11343, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (email:
Division of Epidemiology, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Utah, Salt Lake City.
Prev Chronic Dis. 2025 Sep 4;22:E57. doi: 10.5888/pcd22.250083.
Subjective cognitive decline (SCD) may be associated with poor oral health because of difficulty with self-care or comorbid conditions. Our study aimed to examine oral health status, use of dental services, and the prevalence of SCD among US middle-aged (45-64 y) and older (≥65 y) adults.
We conducted a cross-sectional analysis of 2022 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) data. Our sample consisted of 83,479 adults aged 45 years or older who completed the cognitive decline module. The associations between SCD and oral health, use of dental services, sociodemographic characteristics, chronic disease conditions, and dementia risk factors were examined by using multivariate regression with a generalized linear model, survey-weighted to account for BRFSS's complex sampling design. All models were stratified by age group (45-64 y vs ≥65 y).
Middle-aged and older adults with poor oral health had a higher weighted prevalence of SCD (13.6%) compared with those with good oral health (7.7%). After controlling for covariates, SCD prevalence was increased among adults aged 45 to 64 years with more tooth loss and was lower for those in the same age group who had visited a dentist in the past year (PR = 0.77; 0.65-0.90). Among people aged 65 years or older, SCD prevalence was significantly higher for people with tooth loss compared with no tooth loss, though this pattern was not linear.
A significant association was found between the number of teeth lost, dental service use, and SCD, particularly among adults aged 45 to 64 years. Maintaining good oral health and having regular dental visits may be a strategy to reduce the risk of SCD in middle age. People should be encouraged to seek regular dental care.
主观认知下降(SCD)可能与口腔健康状况不佳有关,原因在于自我护理困难或存在共病情况。我们的研究旨在调查美国中年(45 - 64岁)和老年(≥65岁)成年人的口腔健康状况、牙科服务使用情况以及SCD的患病率。
我们对2022年行为危险因素监测系统(BRFSS)的数据进行了横断面分析。我们的样本包括83479名45岁及以上完成认知下降模块的成年人。通过使用广义线性模型的多变量回归来检验SCD与口腔健康、牙科服务使用、社会人口学特征、慢性病状况和痴呆风险因素之间的关联,并进行调查加权以考虑BRFSS的复杂抽样设计。所有模型按年龄组(45 - 64岁与≥65岁)分层。
与口腔健康良好的成年人(7.7%)相比,口腔健康不佳的中年和老年成年人SCD加权患病率更高(13.6%)。在控制协变量后,45至64岁牙齿脱落较多的成年人SCD患病率增加,而在同一年龄组中过去一年看过牙医的成年人SCD患病率较低(PR = 0.77;0.65 - 0.90)。在65岁及以上的人群中,有牙齿脱落的人SCD患病率明显高于无牙齿脱落的人,尽管这种模式并非呈线性。
发现牙齿脱落数量、牙科服务使用与SCD之间存在显著关联,尤其是在45至64岁的成年人中。保持良好的口腔健康并定期看牙医可能是降低中年SCD风险的一种策略。应鼓励人们寻求定期的牙科护理。