4.6 Article

Tooth loss and regional grey matter volume

Journal

JOURNAL OF DENTISTRY
Volume 129, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jdent.2022.104393

Keywords

Tooth loss; Gray matter volume; Magnetic resonance imaging; Ageing

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Tooth loss is associated with regional grey matter volume (GMV) in community dwelling older men and women from Ireland. Participants with 1-19 teeth and >20 teeth showed increased GMV in the paracentral lobule and cuneus cortex compared to edentates. This finding may provide a potential explanatory link to the association between tooth loss and cognitive decline.
Objectives: To investigate whether tooth loss was associated with regional grey matter volume (GMV) in a group of community dwelling older men and women from Ireland.Methods: A group of 380 dementia-free men and women underwent a dental examination and had a Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) scan as part of The Irish Longitudinal Study of Aging (TILDA). Cortical parcellation was conducted using Freesurfer utilities to produce volumetric measures of gyral based regions of interest. Analysis included multiple linear regression to investigate the association between tooth loss and regional GMVs with adjustment for various confounders.Results: The mean age of participants was 68.1 years (SD 7.3) and 51.6% of the group were female. 50 (13.2%) of the participants were edentulous, 148 (38.9%) had 1-19 teeth, and 182 (47.9%) had >20 teeth. Multiple liner regression analysis with adjustment for a range of potential confounders showed associations between the number of teeth and GMVs in the paracentral lobule and the cuneus cortex. In the paracentral lobule, comparing participants with 1-19 teeth versus edentates there was an increase in GMV of beta=323.0mm3 (95% Confidence Interval [CI] 84.5, 561.6) and when comparing participants with >20 teeth to edentates there was an increase of beta=382.3mm3 (95% CI 126.9, 637.7). In the cuneus cortex, comparing participants with >20 teeth to edentates there was an increase in GMV of beta=380.5mm3 (95% CI 69.4, 691.5).Conclusions: In this group of older men and women from Ireland, the number of teeth was associated with GMVs in the paracentral lobule and the cuneus cortex independent of various known confounders.Clinical significance: Although not proof of causation, the finding that tooth loss was associated with regional reduced GMV in the brain may represent a potential explanatory link to the observed association between tooth loss and cognitive decline.

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