Chewing Disability Is Associated With Cognitive Impairment Among Older Adults: A Population-Based Cohort Study

Author:

Nascimento Gustavo G12,Li Huihua12,Malhotra Rahul34ORCID,Leite Fábio R M12,Peres Karen G12,Chan Angelique34,Peres Marco A12

Affiliation:

1. National Dental Research Institute Singapore, National Dental Centre Singapore , Singapore

2. Oral Health Academic Programme, Duke-NUS Medical School , Singapore

3. Centre for Ageing Research and Education, Duke-NUS Medical School , Singapore

4. Health Services and Systems Research, Duke-NUS Medical School , Singapore

Abstract

Abstract Background Chewing disability is associated with impaired quality of life, potentially leading to depression, and cognitive impairment. Although the chewing-ability-cognition relationship has been explored, examining whether depression mediates this relationship remains unclear. We investigated the association between chewing disability and cognitive impairment development and a potential mediation via depression among older persons. Methods Older persons without cognitive impairment at baseline (n = 973) from the 3 waves of the Panel on Health and Ageing of Singaporean Elderly were investigated. The outcome was incident cognitive impairment by the end of the study, while the exposure was chewing disability over the study period. Time-varying depression was the mediator. Time-fixed confounders included sex, ethnicity, education, marital status, living arrangement, and housing type, and time-varying confounders included age, smoking, cardiovascular diseases, diabetes, number of teeth, and denture wearing. We used marginal structural modeling to evaluate the effect of chewing disability on cognitive impairment development. Results After 6 years, 11% developed cognitive impairment, and chewing disability was reported by 33%. Chewing disability was associated with higher odds of developing cognitive impairment (OR 1.43, 95% CI: 1.09, 1.87), of which 85.3% was explained by the controlled direct effect of chewing disability, whereas the remaining 14.7% could be eliminated if there was no depression. Conclusions Our findings indicate an association between chewing disability and cognitive impairment, while the role of depression could not be fully elucidated. Oral health should be incorporated as part of older persons’ care for its potential to assess the risk for other systemic conditions.

Funder

Ministry of Social and Family Development, Singapore

Singapore Ministry of Health’s National Medical Research Council

Clinician Scientist—Individual Research Grant—New Investigator

Duke-NUS Geriatric Research Fund

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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