Although poor oral health influences the occurrence of pulmonary infection in elderly people, it is unclear how the degree of oral health is linked to mortality from pulmonary infection. Therefore, we evaluated the relationship between oral health and four-year mortality from pneumonia in an elderly Japanese population. The study population consisted of 697 (277 males, 420 females) of the 1282 individuals who were 80 years old in 1997. Data on oral and systemic health were obtained by means of questionnaires, physical examinations, and laboratory blood tests. One hundred eight of the study persons died between 1998 and 2002. Of these, 22 deaths were due to pneumonia. The adjusted mortality due to pneumonia was 3.9 times higher in persons with 10 or more teeth with a probing depth exceeding 4 mm (periodontal pocket) than in those without periodontal pockets. Therefore, the increase in teeth with periodontal pockets in the elderly may be associated with increased mortality from pneumonia.
There is a relationship between perceived chewing ability (number of foods considered chewable) and physical fitness in this 80-year-old population. Chewing ability may be an independent predictor of physical fitness, thus preventative dental care aimed at preserving chewing ability may be able to enhance activities of daily life and quality of life in very elderly individuals.
The findings of the present study indicated that 85-year-old participants with > or = 20 teeth had better subjective physical health than those with < or = 19 teeth.
As quality of life (QOL) could be influenced by oral status in the elderly, we examined whether chewing ability or number of teeth affected QOL in 80-year olds. A cross-sectional survey included dental examination, chewing self-assessment, and a QOL questionnaire. A total of 823 people who were 80 years old participated in this study. QOL was assessed in terms of satisfaction with physical condition, meals, daily living and social interactions, and with face-scale scores. After adjustment for gender, spouse and activities of daily living, dissatisfaction with social interactions was 3.9 times more prevalent in individuals able to chew four foods or fewer than in those chewing 15. Dissatisfaction with physical condition, meals and daily living, and poor face-scale scores, were 2.7, 2.4, 3.4, and 2.4 times more prevalent, respectively, in subjects chewing four foods or fewer. The number of teeth showed little effect. In conclusion, self-assessed chewing ability but not number of teeth was associated with QOL in 80-year-old subjects.
For effective measures of prevention and improvement of oral health in HD patients, clinicians should be aware of the differences in the characteristics of the oral health between patients undergoing HD for DN and CGN.
There were significant associations between serum cortisol level, including cortisol/DHEAS ratio, and periodontitis severity in elderly subjects who had never smoked.
Thiazolidinediones, synthetic ligands of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARgamma), are reported to have direct beneficial effects on diabetic nephropathy without lowering blood glucose levels in human and rat. We hypothesized these effects of thiazolidinediones might be derived from PPARgamma activation of kidney cells, and we examined the expression of PPARgamma and the effect of PPARgamma agonists, troglitazone and 15-deoxy-delta-prostaglandin J2 (15d-PGJ2), on the proliferation and differentiation in rat mesangial cells. A single band of mRNA of PPARgamma with a predicted size was detected in reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction products (RT-PCR) using established PCR probes of PPARgamma. PPARgamma protein in rat mesangial cells was identified as PPARgamma1 by a Western blot. In a gel mobility shift assay to determine a binding activity of PPARgamma, the nuclear protein from rat mesangial cells bound to a (32)P-labeled oligonucleotide probe, including PPAR response elements. A synthetic and a natural ligand of PPARgamma, troglitazone and 15d-PGJ2, decreased thymidine incorporation in a dose dependent manner. After 7 days incubation with troglitazone and 15d-PGJ2, alpha-smooth muscle actin expression, a marker of mesangial cell de-differentiation, was decreased significantly compared to that of control. These results indicate that PPARgamma1 is expressing in rat mesangial cells, and PPARgamma1 activation with its agonists modulates the proliferation and differentiation of cultured rat mesangial cells.
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