Mediation Effect of Oral Hygiene on the Relationship Between Cognitive Function and Oral Health in Older Adults

2015 ◽  
Vol 42 (5) ◽  
pp. 30-37 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kyung Hee Lee ◽  
Brenda L. Plassman ◽  
Wei Pan ◽  
Bei Wu
2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-6
Author(s):  
Deepak Gowda Sadashivappa Pateel ◽  
Shilpa Gunjal ◽  
Liew Fong Fong ◽  
Nur Sulwana Mohd Hanapi

Background. Saliva, as a complex biofluid, plays a pivotal role in maintaining oral health and tooth integrity. There has been inconsistent data available on the relationship between salivary parameters and oral health. This study aims to investigate the association between salivary statherin, acidic proline-rich proteins (aPRP), and calcium with oral hygiene status. Methods. One hundred and eighty-eight healthy subjects aged between 18 and 50 years with varying oral hygiene status who gave consent to participate were included in this cross-sectional study. The subjects were recruited from primary oral health care of MAHSA University. Oral hygiene of all the participants was measured using Oral Hygiene Index–Simplified (OHI-S). Stimulated saliva collected using paraffin wax was analyzed for salivary statherin, aPRP, and calcium. The relationship between salivary statherin, aPRP, and calcium levels with OHI-S was assessed using Spearman’s Rank correlation coefficient; the strength of relationship was assessed by multiple linear regression analysis. Results. The study found a weak positive correlation (r = 0.179, p  = 0.014) between salivary statherin and OHI-S; weak negative correlation (r = −0.187, p  = 0.010) between salivary aPRP and OHI-S; and moderate negative correlation between salivary statherin and salivary aPRP levels (r = −0.50, p  < 0.001) which were statistically significant. Conclusion. Poor oral hygiene is associated with increased statherin and reduced aPRP levels in saliva. Thus, these salivary components may have a role in predicting oral hygiene status.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean Schensul ◽  
Susan Reisine ◽  
Apoorva Salvi ◽  
Toan Ha ◽  
James Grady ◽  
...  

Abstract Objectives. This paper examines the relationship between theoretically-driven mediators and clinical outcomes of a group randomized trial to improve oral health and hygiene of older adults in subsidized housing were compared. Methods. Six low-income senior residences were paired and randomized into two groups. The first received a face to face counseling intervention (AMI) and the second, a peer-facilitated health campaign (three oral health fairs) both based on Fishbein’s Integrated Model. 331 participants were recruited at baseline and 306 completed the post-assessment one month after intervention. Clinical outcome s were Gingival Index (GI) and Plaque score (PS), collected by calibrated dental hygienists. Surveys obtained data on patient background characteristics, and ten oral health beliefs, attitudes, norms and behaviors. GLMM assessed the effects of time, intervention arm, moderators and mediators and intervention by time interactions. Results. Baseline moderators were similar. Both outcomes improved significantly. GI scores changed from baseline mean of 0.38 (sd=.032) to .26 (sd=.025) and PS scores changed from baseline mean of 71.4 (sd=18%) to 59.1% (sd=21%). Fears, intentionality, norms, worries, flossing and sugar consumption improved significantly in both interventions from baseline to post intervention. Self-efficacy, perceived risk of oral health problems, locus of control and brushing improved significantly only in the counseling intervention. Mechanisms predicting GI improvement were intentionality, locus of control, brushing and flossing in association with the counseling intervention. Mechanisms predicting PS improvement were worries about oral hygiene self-management and fear of oral diseases in association with the AMI intervention. In the trimmed final models, only locus of control (predicting GI) and fears of oral diseases (predicting PS) were significant. Conclusions. GI and PS improved more in response to the counseling intervention than the campaign. The counseling intervention had a greater impact on mechanisms of change than the campaign. Locus of control, a key concept in oral hygiene interventions including the IM was the main contributing mechanism for GI. Fear, an emotional response drove improvement in PS reinforcing the importance of cognitive/emotional mechanisms in oral hygiene interventions. Improvements in mediators across both interventions suggest a closer examination of the campaign intervention impact on outcomes over time. Trial Registration: Clinicaltrials.gov NCT02419144, first posted April 17, 2015


2020 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Danielle D’Amico ◽  
Matthew D. Parrott ◽  
Carol E. Greenwood ◽  
Guylaine Ferland ◽  
Pierrette Gaudreau ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S349-S349
Author(s):  
Bei Wu ◽  
Stephen K Shuman ◽  
Michele Saunders

Abstract There is an increasing awareness of the importance of oral health and its associated risk factors among older adults. This symposium includes four papers that address cognitive function, social support and oral health problems and symptoms among older adults in the U.S. and China. Lu and his colleagues examined the reciprocal relationship between cognitive function and complete tooth loss Chinese adults age 50+ using the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal study. The results show that there is a reciprocal relationship between these two indicators. The second paper used the Population Study of Chinese Elderly in Chicago (PINE) and examined the associations between tooth/gums symptoms and changes in cognitive function in Chinese older immigrants. The results reveal that having teeth symptoms was associated with a decline in cognitive function. Using the same PINE data, the third paper examined the association between different characteristics of social relationships and the number of oral health problems among U.S. older Chinese adults. Wu and her colleagues conducted a partner-assisted pilot intervention to improve oral health for community-dwelling older adults with either mild cognitive impairment or mild dementia. The results of this 6-month intervention show that persons in the treatment group had more improvement in oral hygiene than those in the control group. Findings from these four papers illustrate that cognitive function, social support, and oral health are interrelated. This symposium highlights the importance of improving cognitive health, social support, and oral health for middle-aged and older adults.


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. 1424 ◽  
Author(s):  
Seongryu Bae ◽  
Sangyoon Lee ◽  
Kenji Harada ◽  
Keitaro Makino ◽  
Ippei Chiba ◽  
...  

The aim of this study was to examine the association between lifestyle activities, including physical, cognitive, and social activities, and Alzheimer’s disease (AD) signature cortical thickness, as well as to examine the mediating role of AD signature cortical thickness in lifestyle activities and cognitive function in community-dwelling healthy older adults. Participants were 1026 older adults who met the study inclusion criteria. The physical, cognitive, and social activities of daily life were assessed using a self-reporting questionnaire. AD signature cortical thickness was determined using FreeSurfer software. Cognitive function was evaluated using the National Center for Geriatrics and Gerontology-Functional Assessment Tool. Path analysis (based on structural equation modeling (SEM)) of cognitive activities indicated that the direct path from cognitive activities to cognitive function was significant (p < 0.001), as was the direct path from AD signature cortical thickness to cognitive function (p < 0.001). Physical (p < 0.05) or social activities (p < 0.05) had a direct effect on cognitive function. However, AD signature cortical thickness did not mediate the relationship between physical or social activities and cognitive function. Our findings suggest that higher levels of cognitive activities later in life have a significant and positive direct effect on cognitive function. Additionally, AD signature cortical thickness significantly mediates the relationship between cognitive activities and cognitive function.


2016 ◽  
Vol 45 (suppl 2) ◽  
pp. ii13.75-ii56
Author(s):  
Siobhan Scarlett ◽  
Matthew O'Connell ◽  
Hugh Nolan ◽  
Helen O'Brien ◽  
Rose Anne Kenny

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