Poor Oral Health Is Associated With Inflammation, Aortic Valve Calcification, and Brain Volume Among Forager-Farmers.

Benjamin C Trumble, Matthew Schwartz, Andrew T Ozga, Gary T Schwartz, Christopher M Stojanowski, Carrie L Jenkins, Thomas S Kraft, Angela R Garcia, Daniel K Cummings, Paul L Hooper, Daniel Eid Rodriguez, Kenneth Buetow, Bret Beheim, Andrei Irimia, Gregory S Thomas, Randall C Thompson, Margaret Gatz, Jonathan Stieglitz, Caleb E Finch, Michael Gurven, Hillard Kaplan
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Abstract

Poor oral health is associated with cardiovascular disease and dementia. Potential pathways include sepsis from oral bacteria, systemic inflammation, and nutritional deficiencies. However, in post-industrialized populations, links between oral health and chronic disease may be confounded because the lower socioeconomic exposome (poor diet, pollution, and low physical activity) often entails insufficient dental care. We assessed tooth loss, caries, and damaged teeth, in relation to cardiovascular and brain aging among the Tsimane, a subsistence population living a relatively traditional forager-horticulturalist lifestyle with poor dental health, but minimal cardiovascular disease and dementia. Dental health was assessed by a physician in 739 participants aged 40-92 years with cardiac and brain health measured by chest computed tomography (CT; n = 728) and brain CT (n = 605). A subset of 356 individuals aged 60+ were also assessed for dementia and mild cognitive impairment (n = 33 impaired). Tooth loss was highly prevalent, with 2.2 teeth lost per decade and a 2-fold greater loss in women. The number of teeth with exposed pulp was associated with higher inflammation, as measured by cytokine levels and white blood cell counts, and lower body mass index. Coronary artery calcium and thoracic aortic calcium were not associated with tooth loss or damaged teeth. However, aortic valve calcification and brain tissue loss were higher in those who had more teeth with exposed pulp. Overall, these results suggest that dental health is associated with indicators of chronic diseases in the absence of typical confounds, even in a population with low cardiovascular and dementia risk factors.

口腔健康状况不佳与觅食农民的炎症、主动脉瓣钙化和脑容量有关。
口腔健康状况不佳与心血管疾病和痴呆症有关。潜在的途径包括口腔细菌引起的败血症、全身炎症和营养不良。然而,在后工业化人口中,口腔健康与慢性疾病之间的联系可能会被混淆,因为较低的社会经济暴露(不良饮食、污染、低体力活动)往往导致牙科护理不足。我们评估了 Tsimane 人牙齿脱落、龋齿和受损牙齿与心血管和大脑衰老的关系,Tsimane 人是一个自给自足的群体,过着相对传统的狩猎-园艺生活,牙齿健康状况较差,但心血管疾病和痴呆症很少。医生对 739 名 40-92 岁的参与者进行了牙齿健康评估,并通过胸部计算机断层扫描(CT)(728 人)和脑计算机断层扫描(605 人)测量了心脏和大脑的健康状况。此外,还对 356 名 60 岁以上的参与者进行了痴呆和轻度认知障碍评估(33 人受损)。牙齿脱落非常普遍,每十年脱落 2.2 颗牙齿,女性的脱落率是男性的 2 倍。牙髓外露的牙齿数量与较高的炎症(以细胞因子水平和白细胞计数衡量)和较低的体重指数有关。冠状动脉钙和胸主动脉钙与牙齿脱落或受损无关。然而,主动脉瓣钙化和脑组织损失在牙髓暴露较多的人群中更高。总之,这些结果表明,在没有典型混杂因素的情况下,即使在心血管和痴呆症风险因素较低的人群中,牙齿健康也与慢性疾病指标相关。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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