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Journal ArticleDOI

Association between serum calcium and periodontal disease progression in non‐institutionalized elderly

TLDR
Serum calcium may be considered a risk factor for periodontal disease progression in non-institutionalized elderly.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE To assess the effect of baseline serum calcium on the progression of periodontal disease in non-institutionalized elderly. BACKGROUND Although a few studies have found some evidence of the role played by dietary calcium in periodontal disease process, there is a paucity of information pertinent to longitudinal assessment of serum calcium-periodontal relationships. MATERIAL AND METHODS Clinical attachment levels of 266 Japanese subjects aged 70 years were recorded at baseline and annually for six consecutive years. Progression of periodontal disease (PPD) was defined as the number of teeth that showed additional attachment loss of > or =3 mm during the 6 years. The number of PPD was calculated for each subject and categorised into four levels, namely, PPD(0), PPD(1), PPD(2) and PPD(3) where the number of teeth with additional attachment loss ranged from 0, 1-10, 11-20 and >20 respectively. The levels of serum calcium, albumin, random blood sugar, immunoglobulin (IgG, IgA and IgM), gender, smoking habits, education, gingival bleeding and the number of teeth present were obtained at baseline. RESULTS Serum calcium, IgA, smoking, gingival bleeding and teeth present were associated with PPD at p < or = 0.10 and were included in a multinomial logistic regression analysis. Serum calcium was the only variable that was significantly associated with PPD with relative risks of 100 at PPD(1) and PPD(2), respectively, and 1000 at PPD(3). CONCLUSION Serum calcium may be considered a risk factor for periodontal disease progression in non-institutionalized elderly.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Host-derived diagnostic markers related to soft tissue destruction and bone degradation in periodontitis.

TL;DR: It is revealed that no single or combination of markers exists that can disclose periodontal tissue destruction adequately and while the most fruitful source of biomarkers forperiodontal destruction appears to be in molecules tightly related to bone and soft tissue destruction, this remains to be objectively demonstrated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tooth loss and intakes of nutrients and foods: a nationwide survey of Japanese dentists.

TL;DR: Tooth loss was linked with poorer nutrition even among dentists, and some key nutrients and food groups, such as carotene, vitamins A and C, milk and dairy products, and vegetables including green-yellow vegetables, decreased with the increasing number of teeth lost.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of micronutrient malnutrition on periodontal disease and periodontal therapy.

TL;DR: The role of vitamins and minerals and micronutrients in human physiology and the impact of their deficiencies upon periodontal health and disease are reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sex differences in periodontal disease in catastrophic and attritional assemblages from medieval london

TL;DR: The results reveal a significantly higher frequency of periodontal disease, independent of age, among males compared with females in St. Mary Graces, but no significant difference between the sexes in East Smithfield.
Journal ArticleDOI

Predictors and correlates of edentulism in healthy older people.

TL;DR: This paper reviewed peer-reviewed, original research studies published in 2008-2009 that present data relating to the predictors and correlates of edentulism and tooth loss in older adults.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The relationship between bone mineral density and periodontitis in postmenopausal women.

TL;DR: It is concluded that skeletal BMD is related to interproximal alveolar bone loss and, to a lesser extent, to clinical attachment loss, implicating postmenopausal osteopenia as a risk indicator for periodontal disease in post menopause Caucasian women.
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Calcium and vitamin D supplements reduce tooth loss in the elderly

TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of calcium and vitamin D supplements on bone loss from the hip, as well as a 2-year follow-up study after discontinuation of study supplements was investigated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Relationships between mandibular and skeletal bone in an osteoporotic population.

TL;DR: This study attempted to determine relationships between bonemass in the mandible and skeletal bone mass in a group of 85 postmenopausal women with osteoporosis by microdensitometry, cortical thickness at the gonion, the height of the alveolar ridge, and periodontal probings.
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Osteoporosis: A Risk Factor in Periodontal Disease

TL;DR: 12 female patients with osteoporotic fractures and 14 normal women were examined clinically for plaque, gingival bleeding, and loss of attachment on the 6 Ramfjord index teeth.
Journal ArticleDOI

Calcium and the risk for periodontal disease.

TL;DR: In this paper, the role of dietary calcium intake as a contributing risk factor for periodontal disease utilizing the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES Ill), which is representative of the US civilian non-institutionalized population.
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