Beagle Obesity The Link Between Dental Health and Weight
Is There A Link Between Obesity And Oral Health?
Is There A Link Between Obesity And Oral Health?
By Lucy Wyndham
Around the world, obesity is becoming a topic of conversation at government level and in many countries is considered an epidemic. Furthermore, an alarming correlation between obesity and oral health has come to light, where there are clear signs of periodontal disease in those who have a BMI (body mass index) of more than 30. While there are some aspects of the study that make the findings somewhat unclear, such as how gender, age, smoking history, and genetics affect the findings, there are a number of reasons to consider a lifestyle change.
The Answer Might Lie In The Diet
Participants in the study who were in the obese group showed higher levels of sugar and at intake, which are both ingredients that encourage periodontal disease. When the diet is filled up with all these empty calories, its also unlikely that the participant will want to have foods that provide sufficient micronutrients, which are important for gum health and to prevent cavities. An excess of adipose tissue is considered a sign that the participant will have a problem with periodontal disease, and its prevalent in those who fall within the obese category.
Bacteria At The Heart Of The Study
The saliva of a group of women with a BMI of between 27 and 32 was sent for analysis and the outcome revealed a bacteria, Selenomonas noxia, in 98.4% of the subjects samples. A high glycemic diet is considered to be at the heart of this bacteria formation, and also happens to be the food most often associated with those considered overweight or obese. According to industry professionals, one of the fastest ways to tackle both the prevalence of oral bacteria and obesity is to make certain lifestyle changes that include changing out foods that ferment easily and change to simple sugars in the mouth. Refined carbohydrates are right at the top of the list, along with foods that are already sugars.
It Starts From A Young Age
Possibly one of the most disturbing aspects of the study is the revelation that this link in obesity and dental hygiene starts from an early age. A study found that teenagers that fall within the overweight and obese categories have a higher number of caries than those considered to have a normal BMI. Other studies, however, didnt find a link between BMI and caries in children at all, which places a slight hesitation on linking oral health to obesity in children. For example, a 2019 systematic review of 7 studies found that 5 showed no relationship between BMI and caries. There is, however, the studies that find that a diet high in sugar and refined carbs to have an effect on both dental hygiene and the level of obesity in children. Education, therefore, is an important component in the overall maintenance of oral health and keeping body mass within normal ranges.
For those who struggle with their weight and their dental hygiene, there might be a link in the food they eat. While studies are not yet conclusive, keeping an eye on the amount of sugar and refined carbohydrates should help substantially in terms of bringing weight down and reducing bacteria in the saliva.
Obesity and oral health - Is there a link? An observational study
J Indian Soc Periodontol. 2017 May-Jun; 21(3): 229233.
Obesity and oral health - Is there a link? An observational study
and
Neeraj Chandrahas Deshpande
Department of Periodontology, K.M. Shah Dental College and Hospital, Sumandeep Vidyapeeth, Vadodara, Gujarat, India
Mansi Rajendrakumar Amrutiya
Department of Periodontology, K.M. Shah Dental College and Hospital, Sumandeep Vidyapeeth, Vadodara, Gujarat, India
Department of Periodontology, K.M. Shah Dental College and Hospital, Sumandeep Vidyapeeth, Vadodara, Gujarat, India
Address for correspondence:Dr. Neeraj Deshpande, Department of Periodontology, K.M. Shah Dental College and Hospital, Sumandeep Vidyapeeth, Piparia, Waghodia, Vadodara - 391 760, Gujarat, India. E-mail:
moc.liamg@87jareenrdReceived 2016 Aug 18; Accepted 2017 Nov 8.
Copyright: 2018 Indian Society of Periodontology
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 License, which allows others to remix, tweak, and build upon the work non-commercially, as long as the author is credited and the new creations are licensed under the identical terms.
Abstract
Introduction:
Periodontitis is defined as a destructive inflammatory disease involving the supporting tissues of the teeth due to specific microorganisms which results in a progressive destruction of supporting structures of the periodontium. Obesity is excessive body fat in proportion to lean body mass, to such an extent that health is impaired. Obesity, a serious public health problem, relates to a chronic low-grade systemic inflammation and is involved in the development of obesity-linked disorders including insulin resistance, type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, dyslipidemia, and metabolic syndrome. The accurate process whereby obesity can affect periodontal health is so far unclear. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the association between obesity (using body mass index [BMI] and waist circumference [WC]) and periodontal health and disease using various periodontal parameters.
Materials and Methods:
A total of 100 participants were randomly taken and were divided into two groups (fifty participants per group). The participants with BMI more than 30 were considered as obese and participants with BMI <30 were considered nonobese. WC was also measured. Gingival index (GI), pocket probing depth (PPD), gingival recession (REC), and clinical attachment level (CAL) were measured by a single examiner.
Results:
Independent t-test was performed to compare GI, probing depth, gingival recession, and clinical attachment level among obese and nonobese participants. The prevalence of periodontitis was significantly more in obese as compared to nonobese group (P < 0.05 for GI, P < 0.05 for PPD, and P < 0.031 for CAL).
Conclusion:
Strong correlation was found to exist between obesity and periodontitis. Obese participants could be at a greater risk of developing periodontal disease.
Keywords: Body mass index, gingival index, obesity, oral health, pocket probing depth, waist circumference
INTRODUCTION
Periodontitis, commonly called pyorrhea, is an inflammatory infection that alters the tooth-supporting structure, leading to accelerated alveolar bone loss and if not treated, can eventually advance to tooth loss. Chronic periodontal infection is an inflammatory state that is described by a deviation in the microbial environment and composition of subgingival plaque biofilms and accelerated destruction of tooth-supporting architecture that is host mediated.[1] It has been considered as one of the extremely prevalent worldwide conditions and that it is represented as a leading public health dilemma for both developing and developed society. It abstracts among the ten biggest prevalent chronic infections. Periodontitis is a disease of multifactorial origin. Numerous systemic or local risk factors play a major role in its clinical sequences. Periodontal diseases are also influenced by various risk factors including aging, smoking, oral hygiene, socioeconomic status, genetics, race, gender, psychosocial stress, osteopenia, osteoporosis, and various other systemic diseases such as type 2 diabetes mellitus and cardiovascular disease which signifies that periodontitis does not occur merely as a consequence of plaque deposition but is also coupled with various host factors which could alter the consequence of the plaque on a particular individual.
Obesity is defined as excessive body fat in proportion to lean body mass, to such an extent that health is impaired.[2] Obesity, which is considered as a large-scale public health dilemma, is linked to a chronic low-grade systemic inflammation that affords to the evolution of obesity-related disorders including metabolic syndrome, type 2 diabetes, insulin resistance, dyslipidemia, and cardiovascular diseases.[3] In the past few decades, obesity has increased substantially among the population worldwide. It is now considered the sixth biggest crucial dangerous factor contributing to diseases worldwide, and it has been suggested that decreased life expectancy in the future may be the result of increased levels of obesity.[4] Obesity, as recognized by the World Health Organization (WHO), has been known to be one of the predisposing components to majority of chronic diseases which ranges from cardiovascular disease to cancer.[1] A superabundance of energy-dense food and reduced opportunities and encouragements for physical activity have drastically changed the lifestyle pattern of an individual.
As advocated by the WHO, body mass index (BMI) can be used to measure obesity and categorize it for all adult age groups. The full classification for overweight and obesity, developed by the National Institutes of Health through an expert panel that reviewed data from approximately 394 studies, is shown in .[5]
Table 1
Classifications for body mass index
Several researches from around the world have repeatedly shown a positive affiliation among prevalent periodontal disease and obesity. Linden et al. did not observe an affiliation among obesity in early adulthood and severity of periodontitis at the age of 6070 years, whereas 6 years earlier in a study done by Morita et al., it was described that periodontal disease and BMI were positively associated.[4,6] Till date, most of the studies which have been carried out related to obesity were among adults and elderly people. An analytical review of Suvan et al. noticed a heterogeneity among various studies, where higher odds of periodontitis was noted among obese individual but, no studies where identified among young adults that have evaluated whether obesity directly causes periodontitis.[7] Hence, it is of great relevance to figure out this affiliation to effectively interpret the early systemic outcomes of obesity among young adults.
Hence, the need of the present research is to assess the affiliation between obesity (using BMI and waist circumference [WC]) and periodontal health and disease using various periodontal parameters.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
A descriptive cross-sectional research was carried out at the Department of Periodontology. The study period was from March 2015 to March 2016. The study was conducted after approval of Institutional Ethics Committee. In this study, enrollment of the participants was done by means of convenience sampling. The study population in the present research was preferred based on the following inclusion and exclusion criteria.
Inclusion criteria
Participants above the age of 18 years
Participants with BMI >30 are considered obese
Participants with BMI <30 are considered nonobese
Participants with at least 6 natural teeth present in the oral cavity
Participants with generalized chronic periodontitis
Participants with generalized chronic gingivitis.
Exclusion criteria
Participants who had received any antibiotic therapy or any periodontal treatment at most 3 months before are included in the research
Physically or mentally challenged participants
Pregnant women and lactating mothers
Participants with any type of malignancy
Participants not willing to participate.
Sample size determination
To get 0.12 difference in mean GI between two groups at 95% confidence interval and 80% power, the sample size required for the study was 100 (50 per group). The sample size was obtained using N-Master statistical software.
Investigations were conducted by a single researcher. Intraexaminer calibration of the examiner was carried out. The data obtained were evaluated applying Kappa statistics. The coefficient of 0.86 was constructed, reflecting a high degree of agreement in the observations.
For each participant, freshly sterilized instruments were used. A total of 100 participants were enrolled in the research. Before enrollment of any participant in the study, all the participants were briefed verbally about the objective of the research. Written information regarding the study was given, and participants willing to take part in the study were enlisted and written informed consent was procured from entire study participants.
Anthropometric parameters used to assess obesity were recorded that includes measuring of the BMI and WC. BMI was measured as a person's weight, in kilograms, and divided by the square of his/her height in meters. The participants with BMI >30 were considered as obese and participants with BMI <30 were considered nonobese. WC was measured (in centimeter) at the midpoint between lower border of ribs and upper border of pelvis and is divided into two categories using the cutoff points 102 cm for men and 88 cm for women.[8] To record the measurements, weighing machine and measuring tape were used. Periodontal parameters including gingival index (GI) (Loe and Sillness, 1963), pocket probing depth (PPD), gingival recession (REC), and clinical attachment loss (CAL) were recorded. PPD was measured from marginal gingiva to the base of the pocket, gingival recession measured from cementoenamel junction (CEJ) to the marginal gingiva, clinical attachment loss (CAL) from the CEJ to the base of the pocket, on the mesiobuccal, mid-buccal, distobuccal, mesiolingual, midlingual, and distolingual sites of all the teeth.
Data analysis
The data obtained were coded and fed into the SPSS (Statistical Package for the Social Sciences, SPSS software by IBM, USA) version 16 for analysis. Descriptive statistics were used to account for mean and standard deviation. Independent t-test was used to compare PPD, REC, CAL, and GI among the test group (obese participants) and control group (nonobese participants). P = 0.05 was set as the level of significance.
RESULTS
Out of fifty obese participants, 34% were females and 66% were males [], whereas out of 50 nonobese participants, 40% were females and 60% males [].
Table 2
Distribution of gender among obese and nonobese participants
Mean age of nonobese and obese participants was calculated to be 34.14 11.70 and 34.02 9.03, respectively [].
Table 3
Distribution of mean age among obese and nonobese participants
Mean BMI among obese and nonobese was 34.93 2.63 and 25.09 2.73, respectively []. Whereas the mean WC among obese and nonobese was 117.08 17.65 and 77.16 15.04, respectively [].
Table 4
Distribution of mean body mass index
Table 5
Distribution of mean waist circumference
Mean GI score among obese and nonobese participants was 1.95 0.64 and 1.29 0.36, respectively. Mean GI score was found to be greater among obese participants and it was statistically significant with P < 0.05 [].
Table 6
Distribution of mean gingival index score
Mean probing depth values among obese and nonobese participants were 5.07 0.88 and 3.62 0.79, respectively. Mean probing depth values were found to be greater among obese participants and it was statistically significant with P < 0.05 [].
Table 7
Distribution of mean pocket probing depth
Mean gingival recession values among obese and nonobese participants were 0.9 0.94 and 0.68 0.64, respectively. Mean gingival recession values were found to be greater among obese participants and it was statistically significant with P < 0.014 [].
Table 8
Distribution of mean gingival recession
Mean clinical attachment level values among obese and nonobese participants were 5.75 1.09 and 4.53 1.41, respectively. Mean clinical attachment level values were found to be greater among obese participants and this was statistically significant with P < 0.031 [].
Table 9
Distribution of clinical attachment level
DISCUSSION
Our research figures out the affiliation among obesity and periodontitis; where both states are chronic inflammatory diseases by nature, which can possibly worsen the overall systemic inflammatory response. With the emergence of periodontal medicine, it has shed light on the association between oral and systemic health and disease. In today's world, obesity has become one of the biggest significant health risks, which is chronic in nature with multifactorial etiology.
Periodontitis is caused by certain organisms resulting in a progressive destruction of the supporting structures of periodontium. The diseased periodontal tissues yield a lot of pro-inflammatory cytokines such as interleukin (IL)-1 , IL-6, prostaglandin E2, and tumor necrosis factor- (TNF-), which further continues periodontal destruction.
The exact mechanism(s) through which obesity may influence the periodontal health is still unclear. An affiliation among obesity and periodontitis could be explained by an array of possible likely mechanisms. Overweight participants, especially young participants, have an unhealthy dietary pattern which includes the excessive content of sugar and fat, with insufficient micronutrients. Dietary patterns of such type may increase the risk for developing periodontal disease. Excess gain of fat in early life, that is often associated with increased stress levels, may also play a role in promoting periodontal disease. Diversification in oral surroundings or small grade of chronic inflammation may be due to excess of adipose tissue. As many as fifty bioactive molecules known as adipokines are secreted by adipose cells in obese participants. The adipokines comprise hormone-like proteins (adipocytokines, adiponectin, and leptin) and classical cytokines (TNF and IL-6).[8] The increased adipocytes and macrophages lead to the creation of pro-inflammatory cytokines such as TNF-, IL-1 , and IL-6. As the release of inflammatory cytokines is linked closely to a higher vulnerability to bacterial infection, increased production of these pro-inflammatory cytokines increases the host susceptibility heading for the evolution and advancement of periodontal disease.
Another probable mechanism associating obesity and periodontal disease is insulin resistance. Dietary-free fatty acids accord not alone to obesity but as well as to insulin resistance, by acceptable abolition of beta cells of the pancreas. In turn, insulin resistance also contributes to a hyperinflammatory state which is generalized, including periodontal tissue.[8]
In the present research, the occurrence of periodontitis was greater in obese participants as compared to nonobese participants. These findings are in concurrence with results obtained in a study done by Al-Zahrani et al. where it was noted that individuals with a BMI >30 kg/m2 had remarkably greater risk of periodontal disease.[9]
Mean GI score among obese and nonobese participants was 1.95 0.64 and 1.29 0.36, respectively. The mean GI was found to be greater among obese participants, and the difference was statistically significant with P < 0.005. In a study done by Singh et al., he had divided 45 patients into three groups and noted that the mean of GI in Group 1 (nonobese participants without systemic disease), Group 2 (obese participants without systemic disease), and Group 3 (obese participants with systemic disease [hypertension]) were 1.44, 1.78, and 1.86, respectively. There was statistically significant difference between Group 1 and Group 2 (P = 0.001).[8]
Mean probing depth values among obese and nonobese participants were 5.07 0.88 and 3.62 0.79, respectively, which was found to be greater among obese participants and was statistically significant with P < 0.005. In the study done by de Castilhos et al. involving examination of 720 participants, the author found that existence of periodontal pocket was not affiliated with obesity or WC.[10]
Mean clinical attachment level values among obese and nonobese participants were 5.75 1.09 and 4.53 1.41, respectively. It was found to be greater among obese participants and was statistically significant with P < 0.031 []. Johanne Kongstad et al. (2008) found that obese participants had a lower odds ratio (OR) for CAL in comparison to participants with normal weight (OR: 0.60; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.360.99). He concluded that BMI may be inversely associated with CAL but positively related with the balance of payments.
However, despite all attempts being made to carry out a study which considers all the required parameters, for assessing obesity and periodontal disease, some limitations do exist in this study as well.
One of the limitations of this study is its research design (cross-sectional study design) which is known to hinder the establishment of a definite cause and effect relationship
Furthermore, a number of possible confounders such as socioeconomic and lifestyle factors, genetic predisposition, age, sex, stress, and smoking status associated with body weight and oral health have not been considered in this study
The individual markers and confounding factors at a molecular level that may cause obesity were not considered
To measure obesity, BMI and WC were taken into consideration in our study while several studies used wait-to-hip ratio also which was not considered in this study
Here, in this study, manual probe (UNC 15) was used to measure periodontal findings, whereas other generations of probe could have been used for better results
The sample size in this study is comparatively low to generalize the results for a large scale of population. The samples included in the present study were taken from only one institution which cannot generalize the whole population. The study can be organized on an array of population to validate the noted affiliation and to rule their level of generalization
In the present study, patient's deleterious oral habits were not taken into consideration
Investigator blinding could have been done to overcome the chance of bias. Further studies can be planned keeping in mind the shortcomings of this study.
CONCLUSION
Obesity has been suspected as a dangerous aspect for a number of conditions such as cardiovascular disease and diabetes. In the present research, the relationship between measures of overall and abdominal obesity (BMI and WC) and periodontal disease have demonstrated significant affiliation. In the era of evolving periodontal medicine, considering various factors affecting the development of chronic periodontitis has become a two-way process. The current study sheds light on the association of obesity and chronic periodontitis. Keeping in mind the limitations of the study, still, long-term longitudinal multicenter studies are required to further validate this relationship.
Financial support and sponsorship
Nil.
Conflicts of interest
There are no conflicts of interest.
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