Ship J A, Fischer D J
University of Michigan School of Dentistry, USA.
J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci. 1997 Sep;52(5):M310-9. doi: 10.1093/gerona/52a.5.m310.
Saliva is essential for the maintenance of oral health. The primary constituent of saliva is water and, traditionally, decreased body water homeostasis has been linked with salivary dysfunction. This is consistent with the greater prevalence of dehydration and salivary gland dysfunction among the elderly. However, this association between dehydration and salivary dysfunction has never been tested using objective criteria. The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of body dehydration upon parotid salivary flow rates in young and older healthy adults.
Twelve young (20-40 years) and 12 older (60-80 years) healthy subjects abstained from food and beverage intake for 24 h (dehydration) and then underwent intravenous rehydration to replace all lost weight. Unstimulated and stimulated parotid salivary flow rates, weight, hematocrit, hemoglobin, serum sodium, plasma protein, creatinine, serum, and urine osmolality values were assessed at baseline, 24 h, and 1 h after the completion of rehydration.
All subjects experienced a significant decrease in weight and increased levels of hematocrit, hemoglobin, plasma protein, and creatinine during dehydration with few age-related differences. Intravenous fluid replacement increased weight and decreased hematocrit, hemoglobin, plasma protein, and creatinine back to baseline values, demonstrating that subjects were metabolically rehydrated. Unstimulated (young and older, p = .0001) and stimulated (young, p > .05; older, p = .03) parotid flow rates decreased during the 24-h dehydration period, yet did not completely return (young and older unstimulated, p < .001; young and older stimulated, p > .05) to baseline values after rehydration.
These findings suggest that body dehydration is associated with decreased parotid salivary gland flow rates, and that these changes are generally age-independent in healthy adults. Furthermore, although subjects were metabolically rehydrated, unstimulated salivary flow rates remained significantly lower than baseline levels.
唾液对维持口腔健康至关重要。唾液的主要成分是水,传统上,机体水稳态的下降与唾液功能障碍有关。这与老年人中脱水和唾液腺功能障碍的较高患病率相一致。然而,脱水与唾液功能障碍之间的这种关联从未使用客观标准进行过测试。本研究的目的是确定身体脱水对年轻和老年健康成年人腮腺唾液流速的影响。
12名年轻(20 - 40岁)和12名老年(60 - 80岁)健康受试者禁食禁水24小时(脱水),然后进行静脉补液以补充所有减轻的体重。在基线、24小时以及补液完成后1小时评估非刺激性和刺激性腮腺唾液流速、体重、血细胞比容、血红蛋白、血清钠、血浆蛋白、肌酐、血清和尿渗透压值。
所有受试者在脱水期间体重显著下降,血细胞比容、血红蛋白、血浆蛋白和肌酐水平升高,且年龄相关差异较小。静脉补液使体重增加,血细胞比容、血红蛋白、血浆蛋白和肌酐降至基线值,表明受试者在代谢上得到了补液。在24小时脱水期间,非刺激性(年轻和老年,p = .0001)和刺激性(年轻,p > .05;老年,p = .03)腮腺流速下降,但补液后未完全恢复(年轻和老年非刺激性,p < .001;年轻和老年刺激性,p > .05)至基线值。
这些发现表明身体脱水与腮腺唾液腺流速降低有关,并且这些变化在健康成年人中通常与年龄无关。此外,尽管受试者在代谢上得到了补液,但非刺激性唾液流速仍显著低于基线水平。