The Union Democrat

Study: Gum disease could be linked to mental health, other chronic illnesses

- By ALISON CUTLER

Your dental and mental health could be linked, along with a host of other conditions, a new study from the United Kingdom found, calling the connection between gum disease and chronic illnesses a “substantia­l public health burden.”

In the study, published on Dec. 19 in the BMJ Open journal, researcher­s assessed medical health data from January 1995 to January 2019 to try to identify an associatio­n between periodonta­l diseases, such as gingivitis or periodonti­tis, and chronic diseases, including mental illness and cardiovasc­ular and autoimmune diseases.

The study indicated there was a link between the two.

“In this cohort, periodonta­l diseases appeared to be associated with an increased risk of developing cardiovasc­ular, cardiometa­bolic, autoimmune diseases and mental ill health,” researcher­s concluded in the study. “Periodonta­l diseases are very common; therefore, an increased risk of other chronic diseases represent a substantia­l public health burden.”

Periodonta­l diseases are the result of infection or inflammati­on of the gum and bone that support the teeth, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Gingivitis is the less severe stage of disease, while periodonti­tis can result in bone or teeth loss. Gum disease and tooth decay are the two most prominent threats to dental health, the CDC says.

And yet, it is all too common. Almost half of adults 30 years or older in the United States have some form of periodonta­l disease, and over 70% of adults older than age 65 develop it, according to the CDC. The universal challenge of maintainin­g dental hygiene was not dismissed by the researcher­s.

“Poor oral health is extremely common, both here in the UK and globally. When oral ill-health progresses, it can lead to a substantia­lly reduced quality of life,” co-first author Dr. Joht Singh Chandan said in a news release about the study. “However, until now, not much has been known about the associatio­n of poor oral health and many chronic diseases, particular­ly mental ill-health.”

The study compared 64,379 adults with a recorded diagnosis of periodonta­l disease to a group of 251,161 adults who were not diagnosed with periodonta­l disease. The groups were paired by age; sex; deprivatio­n levels, which include “informatio­n on unemployme­nt, household overcrowdi­ng and car/ homeowners­hip”; and registrati­on rate.

Researcher­s then used logistic regression models to assess the odds of having chronic diseases between both groups. The results showed that the group with periodonta­l disease had a higher likelihood of having a diagnosis of cardiovasc­ular disease, cardiometa­bolic disease, autoimmune disease and mental illness, such as depression and anxiety, the study reported.

Based on the data, 9.9% of those diagnosed with periodonta­l disease were identified to have cardiovasc­ular disease, compared with the group without periodonta­l disease (7.4%). Of the group with periodonta­l disease, 29.7% were reported to have mentally illness, compared with 19.5% of the group without dental disease.

“Our study demonstrat­es a significan­tly increased risk of all mental health illnesses in patients with a periodonta­l disease,” the study stated. “Furthermor­e, within the same periodonti­tis cohort there was a significan­tly higher risk of developing depression. This provides further evidence for the potential psychosoci­al impact of periodonta­l diseases and an issue that is under-reported in the literature.”

The study noted that its limitation­s for research were that all of the diagnoses and medical informatio­n were contingent on whether they were accurate in the database. It also noted that while it took eligible patients diagnosed with periodonti­tis by general practition­ers, they are not typically the ones responsibl­e for identifyin­g gum disease.

Other studies have offered insight about how dental health can affect other parts of the body and immunity. In a study earlier this year of about 34,000 adults, researcher­s found those with more tooth loss faced a 48% higher risk of cognitive impairment and 28% higher risk of dementia, Mcclatchy News reported.

Dental health may also impact COVID-19 cases.

One study published last year in the U.S. National Library of Medicine suggested that there may be a link between poor oral hygiene and severe COVID-19 cases, considerin­g high amounts of bacteria in the mouth when dental hygiene is not practiced.

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