Periodontitis in individuals with few remaining teeth and a high gingival bleeding index increases the probability of dyslipidemia

Author:

Gomes‐Filho Isaac Suzart1ORCID,Freitas Taciane Oliveira Bet1ORCID,Cruz Simone Seixas da12ORCID,Trindade Soraya Castro1ORCID,Figueiredo Ana Claudia Morais Godoy3ORCID,Couto Souza Paulo Henrique4ORCID,Cerqueira Eneida de Moraes Marcílio1ORCID,Hintz Alexandre Marcelo1ORCID,Carneiro Daline Oliveira15ORCID,Lacerda Juliana Andrade de5,Seymour Gregory John6ORCID,Scannapieco Frank Andrew7ORCID,Loomer Peter Michael8ORCID,Passos‐Soares Johelle de Santana15ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Health Feira de Santana State University Feira de Santana Bahia Brazil

2. Health Sciences Center Federal University of Recôncavo of Bahia Bahia Brazil

3. Epidemiology Surveillance Federal District Health State Department Distrito Federal Brasília Brazil

4. Department of Dentistry Pontifical Catholic University of Paraná Paraná Brazil

5. Department of Preventive Dentistry Faculty of Dentistry Federal University of Bahia Salvador Brazil

6. School of Dentistry The University of Queensland Queensland Australia

7. Department of Oral Biology University at Buffalo Buffalo New York USA

8. School of Dentistry The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio San Antonio Texas USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundDyslipidemia, a silent multifactorial condition, is characterized by changes in blood lipid levels, affecting all socioeconomic strata, increasing the risk for atherosclerotic diseases. This study investigated whether there is an association between dyslipidemia and the combined exposure of periodontitis plus the number of remaining teeth, gingival bleeding, or caries.MethodsA two‐center cross‐sectional study was conducted involving 1270 individuals, with a minimum age of 18 years. Socioeconomic and demographic data, health conditions, lifestyle parameters, and anthropometric, biochemical, and oral clinical examinations were performed. The exposures considered were the presence of periodontitis, dental caries, number of remaining teeth, and gingival bleeding. The outcome was dyslipidemia as defined by the Brazilian Guidelines on Dyslipidemia and Prevention of Atherosclerosis. The combined associations between periodontitis plus other oral health conditions and dyslipidemia were estimated using confounder‐adjusted prevalence ratios (PRsingle, PRmultiple, for single and multiple covariable adjustments) with 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs), in a Poisson regression model with robust variance.ResultsThe occurrence of dyslipidemia was 70.1% and periodontitis was 84.1%. A positive association between periodontitis and dyslipidemia existed: PRsingle = 1.13; 95% CI: 1.01–1.26. Combined exposure of periodontitis plus <11 remaining teeth (PRmultiple = 1.23; 95% CI: 1.05–1.43), as well as combined exposure of periodontitis plus ≥10% gingival bleeding and <11 remaining teeth (PRmultiple = 1.22; 95% CI: 1.03–1.44), represented greater probabilities of 23% and 22% of individuals having a diagnosis of dyslipidemia.ConclusionPeriodontitis combined with fewer than 11 teeth doubled the likelihood of being diagnosed with dyslipidemia.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Periodontics,General Medicine

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