Factors related to subjective evaluation of difficulty in chewing among community‐dwelling older adults

Author:

Seto Eri1,Kosaka Takayuki1ORCID,Hatta Kodai1,Mameno Tomoaki1,Mihara Yusuke1ORCID,Fushida Shuri1,Murotani Yuki1,Maeda Erisa1,Akema Suzuna1,Takahashi Toshihito1,Wada Masahiro1,Gondo Yasuyuki2,Masui Yukie3,Ishizaki Tatsuro3ORCID,Kamide Kei45ORCID,Kabayama Mai5ORCID,Ikebe Kazunori1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Removable Prosthodontics and Gerodontology Osaka University Graduate School of Dentistry Osaka Japan

2. Department of Clinical Thanatology and Geriatric Behavioral Science Osaka University Graduate School of Human Sciences Osaka Japan

3. Tokyo Metropolitan Geriatric Hospital and Institute of Gerontology Tokyo Japan

4. Department of Geriatric and General Medicine Osaka University Graduate School of Medicine Osaka Japan

5. Division of Health Sciences Osaka University Graduate School of Medicine Osaka Japan

Abstract

AimAwareness of difficulty chewing may limit the diversity of food intake in older adults. However, few studies have clarified which factors are related to subjective difficulty in chewing. The aim was to identify factors related to subjective difficulty in chewing in 70‐ and 80‐year‐old Japanese older adults.MethodsA total of 1680 participants (792 men, 888 women) were surveyed. Difficulty in chewing was assessed with questionnaires regarding food intake, such as rice, apples, beef, and hard rice crackers. The participants were classified into two groups, the “with difficulty” group (participants who answered “cannot eat,” “can eat with difficulty,” and “can eat if small”) and the “without difficulty” group (participants who answered “can eat without problems”), according to their answers to questionnaires for each food. A logistic regression analysis with subjective difficulty in chewing as the dependent variable was performed for each food.ResultsSubjective difficulty in chewing was associated with age, occlusal force, and depression for rice; age, number of remaining teeth, occlusal force, and depression for apples; number of remaining teeth, occlusal force, and depression for beef; and number of remaining teeth and occlusal force for hard rice crackers.ConclusionsAge, number of remaining teeth, and occlusal force, as well as depression, might be related to subjective evaluation of difficulty chewing in community‐dwelling Japanese older adults. Geriatr Gerontol Int 2023; ••: ••–••.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine

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