Premium
Tooth loss and its relationship with protein intake by elderly Brazilians—A structural equation modelling approach
Author(s) -
Bomfim Rafael A.,
de Souza Luciana B.,
Corrente José E.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
gerodontology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.7
H-Index - 54
eISSN - 1741-2358
pISSN - 0734-0664
DOI - 10.1111/ger.12317
Subject(s) - medicine , confounding , dentures , tooth loss , gerontology , dentistry , structural equation modeling , quality of life (healthcare) , physiology , environmental health , oral health , statistics , mathematics , nursing
Objective This study aimed at assessing the relationship between self‐perceived tooth loss and wearing dentures, on the one hand, and the consumption of protein, on the other hand, among the elderly population of Botucatu, SP . Food consumption tends to decrease with ageing, especially protein intake, and one of the causes could be the precariousness of oral health. Several risk factors associated with deficient dietary protein intake have been identified, namely greater physical dependence, reduced caloric intake and food insecurity, but no studies have analysed whether tooth loss and prostheses interfere with protein intake. Methods An interview was conducted among 365 elderly individuals, in which we examined oral health‐related quality of life ( OHRQ oL) as the only latent variable, in a 24‐hour nutritional assessment dietary recall repeated 3 times, conducted in person by a trained nutritionist and also performed an analysis of nutritional needs using the Nutrition Data System Research ( NDSR ) Program. Results The structural equation model, performed using Stata v.14, showed that lack of teeth (standardised coefficient [ SC ] = 0.21, P < .001), and prosthesis use ( SC = −0.21, P < .001) was associated with OHRQ oL. Lack of teeth had a direct effect on the consumption of animal protein ( SC = 0.08, P = .02), a strong total effect on animal protein intake ( SC = 0.51, P = .04) and a medium effect on total protein intake ( SC = 0.20, P = .03), adjusted for confounders (depression and medical problems). Conclusion Tooth loss had a strong and significant total effect on animal protein intake and a medium effect on total protein intake among elderly Brazilians.