We found a match
Your institution may have rights to this item. Sign in to continue.
- Title
Investigating the Association Between Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Periodontitis.
- Authors
Loke, Weiqiang; Girvan, Thomas; Ingmundson, Paul; Verrett, Ronald; Schoolfield, John; Mealey, Brian L.
- Abstract
Background: Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a sleep disorder characterized by disruptions of normal sleep architecture. Chronic periodontitis is a chronic disease of the periodontium that elicits a general inflammatory response to local dental plaque. It has been suggested that periodontal disease may increase in severity with increasingly severe OSA because both disease entities share common inflammatory pathways, acting synergistically to alter the host response. The aim of this study is to analyze the association between severity of OSA and the prevalence/severity of periodontitis. Methods: One hundred patients from a large veterans administration sleep study center (n = 26 normal, n = 21 mild, n = 19 moderate, n = 34 severe) diagnosed with an overnight polysomnogram underwent a comprehensive periodontal examination. Periodontal parameters measured included the following: 1) mean periodontal probing depth (PD); 2) clinical attachment level (CAL); 3) gingival recession; and 4) percentage of sites with bleeding on probing, plaque, PD ≥5 mm, and CAL ≥3 mm. Results: Seventy-three percent of the sampled population had moderate/severe periodontal disease. χ² analyses revealed no significant differences in the prevalence of periodontal disease between the apnea-hypopnea index (AHI) groups, with a negligible Spearman correlation coefficient of 0.246 between AHI severity and periodontal disease severity categories. Analysis of covariance indicated a significant association between AHI severity categories and percentage of sites with plaque, after adjusting for age. Multivariable logistic regression analysis predicting moderate/severe periodontitis with AHI score, age, and smoking status indicated a significant association with age (P = 0.028) but no significant association with the other two predictors. Conclusion: OSA was not significantly associated with the prevalence of moderate/severe periodontitis and the periodontal parameters examined, except percentage plaque.
- Subjects
SLEEP apnea syndromes; PERIODONTITIS; INFLAMMATION; DENTAL plaque; PERIODONTAL pockets; GINGIVAL recession; RANK correlation (Statistics); ANALYSIS of covariance
- Publication
Journal of Periodontology, 2015, Vol 86, Issue 2, p232
- ISSN
0022-3492
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1902/jop.2014.140229