Oral Health in Patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
Francisco Rogerio Rodrigues Costa1, Lucio Helio Pereira de Almeida2, Maria Vieira de Lima Saintrain3*, Alinne Patierry Oliveira Pacifico4, Giovanni Iury Martins Pontes4, Cicero Leonardo do Nascimento Braga4, Antonia Gleiciane Marques Andrade5, Eliane Ferreira Sampaio6
Citation : Francisco Rogerio Rodrigues Costa,et.al, Oral Health in Patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease International Journal of Research Studies in Biosciences. 2018, 6(6) : 21-27
Background: The chronic obstructive pulmonary disease is a major cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide, with significant impact on general health and, therefore, oral health.
Aim: To identify the relationship between the prevalence of dental caries and tooth loss in patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease.
Methods: Epidemiological cross-sectional study including 80 individuals aged 32-93 years. Data were collected using the DMFT index. Mann-Whitney U test, Chi-squared and Fisher's Exact test were used for data analysis with statistical significance set at p< 0.05.
Results: COPD stages of patients were classified into severe/very severe (52.5%) and mild/moderate (47.5%). The DMFT index was 29.8, with a strong relationship between missing teeth and severe/very severe COPD (p=0.019), and required extraction and mild/moderate COPD (p=0.022). Statistical significance was found between COPD and loose teeth (p=0.032). Patients with severe/very severe COPD had a median of 41 years of smoking habit, 38 years of drinking and smoked 40 cigarettes a day.
Conclusions: Patients with COPD presented a high DMFT index; in addition, missing teeth and required extraction were strongly related with COPD.