4.5 Article

Mercury Exposure and Periodontitis Among a Korean Population: The Shiwha-Banwol Environmental Health Study

Journal

JOURNAL OF PERIODONTOLOGY
Volume 80, Issue 12, Pages 1928-1936

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1902/jop.2009.090293

Keywords

Epidemiology; mercury; periodontitis

Funding

  1. Ministry of Health, Welfare and Family, Seoul, Korea [8502006003]
  2. Ministry of Environment, Seoul, Korea [900-20060032]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Background: The oral effect of chronic low-level mercury exposure is not completely understood. This study examined whether mercury exposure is associated with periodontitis. Methods: This study cross-sectionally surveyed 1,328 residents (598 males and 730 females) from the prospective Shiwha and Banwol cohort in Korea from July 2005 to August 2006 at baseline. Two dentists assessed periodontitis, an outcome, using the Community Periodontal Index (CPI): CPI 3 or 4 and CPI 0 to 2 were classified as periodontitis and non-periodontitis, respectively. The hair mercury level, the predictor, was analyzed. The mercury level was categorized according to the reference dose of the Environmental Protection Agency of the United States: normal = <1 ppm and high = >= 1 ppm. Age, gender, economic status, smoking, frequency of daily tooth-brushing, diabetes mellitus, hyperlipidemia, and obesity were assessed as confounders. Logistic regression analysis was used to evaluate the adjusted association. Subgroup analyses for gender were also performed. Results: Mercury exposure was independently associated with periodontitis (odds ratio = 3.17). Males with high mercury levels had a 50.0% higher probability of having periodontitis than females with normal mercury levels. Of them, the interaction effect between the body burden of mercury and gender was 39.0%. The odds ratio between periodontitis and high mercury levels was higher for males than females (95% confidence interval: 0.99 to 2.23 versus 0.59 to 1.26, respectively). Conclusions: These results suggest that mercury exposure had an independent association with periodontitis. High body-burden mercury in males might be a contributory factor linked with periodontitis. J Periodontol 2009;80:1928-1936.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available