Self‐reported sleep bruxism and mortality in 1990–2020 in a nationwide twin cohort

Author:

Ahlberg Jari1ORCID,Lobbezoo Frank2ORCID,Manfredini Daniele3,Piirtola Maarit45,Hublin Christer6,Kaprio Jaakko4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Diseases University of Helsinki, and Helsinki University Hospital Helsinki Finland

2. Department of Orofacial pain and Dysfunction, Academic Centre for Dentistry Amsterdam (ACTA) University of Amsterdam and Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam Amsterdam The Netherlands

3. School of Dentistry, Department of Biomedical Technologies University of Siena Siena Italy

4. Institute for Molecular Medicine Finland FIMM, HiLIFE University of Helsinki Helsinki Finland

5. UKK Institute for Health Promotion Research Tampere Finland

6. Finnish Institute of Occupational Health Helsinki Finland

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThe association of sleep bruxism with mortality has not been studied.ObjectivesAltogether 12 040 subjects from the nationwide Finnish twin cohort were included in the analyses. We examined whether self‐reported sleep bruxism is associated with increased risk of mortality, and if so, whether the effect is independent of known common risk factors. The time span of the follow‐up was 30 years.MethodsCox proportional hazards regression models (Hazard Ratios and their 95% Confidence Intervals) adjusted by age, sex and covariates were used to assess the effect of baseline bruxism status in 1990 on future mortality in 1990–2020.ResultsThe risk of mortality among all participants (n = 12 040), independent of missing covariates and adjusted by age and sex, was 40% higher in weekly bruxers than in never bruxers (HR 1.40, 95% CI 1.16–1.68, p < .001). However, when adjusted by all studied covariates, (n = 11 427) the risk was no longer observed (HR 1.04, 95% CI 0.86–1.25, p = .717). Despite the overall lack of between bruxism and mortality after adjustment for covariates, we examined the cause‐specific risks for major cause‐of‐death groups. There were no substantial associations of weekly bruxism with major disease outcomes by the fully adjusted hazard ratios for them.ConclusionBruxism does not kill—in line with its definition of being rather a behaviour (with all its phenotypes) than a disease.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Dentistry

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