4.5 Article

Association of vitamin K, fibre intake and progression of periodontal attachment loss in American adults

Journal

BMC ORAL HEALTH
Volume 23, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12903-023-02929-9

Keywords

Periodontitis; Attachment loss; Vitamin K; Dietary fibre; NHANES

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This study explored the association between severe periodontal attachment loss and vitamin K or fibre intake in American adults. It found that there was an inverse association between vitamin K intake and the progression of periodontal attachment loss, and dietary fibre intake should be moderate, especially in males.
BackgroundPeriodontitis-related attachment loss is accompanied by mucosal bleeding and inflammatory lesions. Dietary vitamin K and fibre intake are known to be correlation factors of haemostasis and anti-inflammation, respectively.ObjectiveTo explore the association between severe periodontal attachment loss and vitamin K or fibre intake in American adults.MethodsA cross-sectional analysis was conducted including 2747 males and 2218 females in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys (NHANES) from 2009 to 2014. The number of teeth with severe periodontal attachment loss (above 5 mm attachment loss) was used as the dependent variable. The main independent variables included the intake of vitamin K and dietary fibre. The association among variables was examined using multivariable linear regression models, hierarchical regression, fitted smoothing curves, and generalized additive models.ResultsBased on the indicators of 4965 subjects, we found that severe attachment loss tended to occur in elderly individuals or males and was accompanied by less intake of vitamin K or dietary fibre, as well as lower educational qualification. Vitamin K intake was stably negatively associated with attachment loss progression in each multivariable linear regression model. In subgroup analyses, a negative association between fibre intake and attachment loss progression was identified in all races except blacks (beta = 0.0005, 95% CI: -0.0005 to 0.0016). The relationship between fibre intake and attachment loss progression was a broad U-shaped curve (inflection point: 753.4 mg), which especially manifested in males (inflection point: 967.5 mg).ConclusionThere was an inverse association between vitamin K intake and the progression of periodontal attachment loss in American adults, while dietary fibre should be moderate in intake (below 753.4 mg), especially in males (below 967.5 mg).

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