CLEVELAND: A recent study explored the effect of obesity on nonsurgical periodontal care. It also evaluated potential pathways that might illustrate the connection between the two conditions. The data confirmed a correlation and could be used to inform treatment planning for patients suffering from obesity and periodontal disease.
According to Dr. Andres Pinto, co-author of the study and professor at the Case Western Reserve University School of Dental Medicine, obesity and periodontitis were similar. They were both caused by inflammation.
After examining a wide range of existing studies, the researchers linked certain symptoms of obesity, namely increased body mass index, waist circumference and percentage of body fat, with an increased risk of periodontal disease. They concluded that changes in body chemistry affect metabolism, which causes inflammation.
“Periodontal disease occurs in patients more susceptible to inflammation—who are also more susceptible to obesity,” Pinto said. “Oral health care professionals need to be aware of the complexity of obesity to counsel their patients about the importance of an appropriate body weight and maintaining good oral hygiene,” he added.
Pinto believed that further research was needed to examine the relationship between the two diseases as there was currently not enough evidence to recommend changes in treatment planning.
“There is a thought, from the clinical perspective, that if you treat one of the issues, it may impact the other,” he said. “This is the big question. For example, if we treat obesity successfully, will this impact periodontal disease to the point of being of clinical relevance compared to control population. The jury is still out given the paucity of controlled, well designed, clinical trials on this issue.”
-article published in the British Dental Journal