| Literature DB >> 21760667 |
Prasad Dhadse1, Deepti Gattani, Rohit Mishra.
Abstract
Many epidemiological studies have investigated the relationship between periodontal disease (PD) and cardiovascular disease (CVD), but their results are heterogeneous. This review article is designed to update the potential association, that forms the basis of understanding for a (causal) role for PD to cardiovascular events; as reported by various observational (case-control, cohort, cross-sectional) studies, epidemiological and interventional studies, not considering the other number of systemic health outcomes like cerebrovascular disease, pregnancy complications, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, diabetes mellitus complications, osteoporosis, etc. A brief overview has been included for atherosclerosis (ATH), its pathophysiology and the association of periodontal infections as a risk factor for causing ATH, which seems to be a rational one; as development of ATH involves a chronic low-grade inflammation and moreover, it has long been set up prior to development of ischemic heart disease and thus provides potential contributing mechanisms that ATH may contribute singly or in concert with other risk factors to develop ischemic heart disease. This article goes on to discuss the correlation of evidence that is gathered from many scientific studies showing either strong, modest, weak or even no links along with their critical analyses. Finally, this article summarizes the present status of the links that possibly exist between PD and its role as a risk factor in triggering cardiovascular events, in the fairly long journey for the last two decades.Entities:
Keywords: Atherosclerosis; coronary artery disease; periodontitis; risk factor; systematic review
Year: 2010 PMID: 21760667 PMCID: PMC3100856 DOI: 10.4103/0972-124X.75908
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Indian Soc Periodontol ISSN: 0972-124X
Summary of association between oral conditions and CVD in six longitudinal studies with positive findings
| Source, year, total no. of subjects | Country (follow-up period) | Exposure | Outcome | Measure of association | Adjusted for potential confounders |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DeStefano and colleagues,[ | United States (15 years) | Russel’s periodontal index | Admitted to hospital/death from CHD | RR | Smoking, hypertension, age, sex, triglycerides, SES, diabetes, serum lipids, BMI, Previous myocardial infarction |
| Mattila and colleagues,[ | Finland (7 years) | Total dental index | New myocardial infarction or death from CHD | HR+=1.2 | Age, sex, race, education, poverty, marital status, SBP |
| Joshipura and colleagues[ | United States (6 years) | Reported tooth loss due to periodontitis in men | Fatal and non-fatal myocardial infarction and sudden death | RR=1.7 | Age, BMI, exercise, smoking, alcohol use, vitamin E, family history of myocardial infarction before age 60 years |
| Beck and colleagues,[ | United States (18 years) | Whole-mouth bone level | New CHD Fatal CHD Stroke | OR | Age, sex, cholesterol level, smoking, diabetes, blood pressure, family history, education. |
| Morrison and colleagues[ | Canada (23 years) | Mild, severe gingivitis periodontitis | Fatal CHD and stroke | RR at age 35–69 years; mild gingivitis=3.6 | Age, sex, cholesterol level, smoking, diabetes, hypertension, province of residence |
| Wu and colleagues, 2000[ | United States (NHANES-I: 21 years) | Gingivitis and periodontitis (>4 mm pockets); edentulous by Russell’s periodontal index | Incident non-hemorrhagic stroke | RR: Gingivitis=1.2 | Sex, age, race, education, poverty index, diabetes, HT, smoking status, alcohol use, BMI, cholesterol level, sample design |
CHD* = Coronary heart disease
RR# = Relative risk; HR = Hazard Ratio
OR++ = Odds ratio
SBP** = Systolic blood pressure
= Statistically significant adjusted measure of association; 6S, JADA, Vol133, June2002.
Summary of association between oral conditions and CVD in three longitudinal studies with negative findings
| Source, year, total no. of subjects | Country (follow-up period) | Exposure | Outcome | Measure of association | Adjusted for potential confounders |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Joshipura and colleagues,[ | United States (6 years) | Reported history of PD in men | Fatal and non-fatal myocardial infarction and sudden death | RR | Age, BMI |
| Hujoel and colleagues,[ | United States (National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey I: 21 years) | Gingivitis and periodontitis (>1-mm pockets) by Russel’s periodontal index | Death or hospitalization due to CHD | Gingivitis HR | Age, age squared, sex, race, poverty index, marital status, education, marital status/sex |
| Howell and colleagues,[ | United States (12.3 years) | Reported history of PD | Death due to CHD, non-fatal myocardial infarction or stroke | RR=1.13 (confidence limits: 0.99-1.28) adjusted for age and treatment; RR=1.01 (confidence limits: 0.88–1.15) fully adjusted | Age, aspirin and beta carotene treatment assignment, smoking, alcohol use, history of hypertension, BMI, history of diabetes, physical activity, parental history of MI, history of angina |
RR* = Relative risk
BMI** = Body mass index
CHD $ = Coronary heart disease
HR% = Hazard Ratio
NS# = Not significant
Marital Status / Sex = Interaction between marital status and sex
Log = Logarithm; 17S, JADA, Vol133, June2002