Oral health conditions and cognitive functioning in middle and later adulthood
BMC Oral Health 2014, 14:70
doi:10.1186/1472-6831-14-70
Published: 13 June 2014
Published: 13 June 2014
Abstract (provisional)
Background
The purpose of the present study was to examine the impact of oral health conditions
on cognitive functioning on basis of data samples from several European countries.
Methods
Secondary analyses were conducted of data from wave 2 of the Survey of Health, Ageing,
and Retirement in Europe (SHARE) which includes 14 European countries and is intended
to be representative of each country's middle and later adulthood population. Information
on word recall, verbal fluency, and numeracy as well as information on chewing ability
and denture wearing status was available for a total of 28,693 persons aged 50+. Multivariate
regression analysis was used to detect influences of oral health parameters on cognitive
functioning (p < 0.05).
Results
Persons with good chewing ability or without dentures had significantly better word
recall, verbal fluency, and numeracy skills than persons with chewing impairment or
with dentures. The observed patterns of parameter estimates imply differential oral
health impacts on numeracy compared to word recall and verbal fluency.
Conclusions
The present study provides novel large-scale epidemiological evidence supportive of
an association between oral health and cognitive functioning. Future research should
intend to verify the precise causal links between oral health conditions, various
cognitive dimensions, and their neural correlates.
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