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Journal Article

Citation

Heegaard K, Avlund K, Holm-Pedersen P, Hvidtfeldt UA, Bardow A, Grønbaek M. J. Public Health Dent. 2011; 71(4): 318-326.

Affiliation

Copenhagen Gerontological Oral Health Research Centre, School of Dentistry, University of Copenhagen at Copenhagen, Denmark Section of Social Medicine, Institute of Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Copenhagen at Copenhagen, Denmark The Danish Aging Research Centre, University of Aarhus at Odense and Copenhagen, Denmark Centre for Healthy Aging, University of Copenhagen at Copenhagen, Denmark Centre for Alcohol Research, National Institute of Public Health at Copenhagen, Denmark Department of Oral Medicine, School of Dentistry, University of Copenhagen at Copenhagen, Denmark.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, American Association of Public Health Dentists, Publisher John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/j.1752-7325.2011.00276.x

PMID

22320290

Abstract

Objectives: To study if an association between total weekly intake of alcohol, type-specific weekly alcohol intake, alcoholic beverage preference, and the number of teeth among older people exists. Methods: A cross-sectional study including a total of 783 community-dwelling men and women aged 65-95 years who were interviewed about alcohol drinking habits and underwent a clinical oral and dental examination. Multiple regression analyses were applied for studying the association between total weekly alcohol consumption, beverage-specific alcohol consumption, beverage preference (defined as the highest intake of one beverage type compared with two other types), and the number of remaining teeth (≤20 versus >20 remaining teeth). Results: The odds ratio (OR) of having a low number of teeth decreased with the total intake of alcohol in women, with ORs for a low number of teeth of 0.40 [95 percent confidence interval (CI) 0.22-0.76] in women drinking 1-14 drinks per week and 0.34 (95 percent CI 0.16-0.74) in women with an intake of more than 14 drinks per week compared with abstainers. Similar relations could also be obtained for type-specific alcohol intake of wine and for wine and spirits preference among women. Men who preferred beer showed a decreased risk for a low number of teeth compared with men with other alcohol preferences. Conclusion: In this study, alcohol consumption, wine drinking, and wine and spirits preference among women were associated with a higher number of teeth compared with abstainers. Among men, those who preferred beer also had a higher number of teeth.


Language: en

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