[Mind your teeth - the relationship between mastication and cognition]
- PMID: 28920970
- DOI: 10.5177/ntvt.2017.09.16233
[Mind your teeth - the relationship between mastication and cognition]
Abstract
Elderly persons, especially those suffering from dementia, are at great risk of suffering from oral health problems such as orofacial pain and loss of natural teeth. A possible explanation could be that the cognitive and motor impairments resulting from dementia cause a decrease in self-care and as such, a worsening of oral health. An alternative explanation is that cognition and oral health influence each other. Animal studies show that a decrease in masticatory activity, for example due to a soft diet or loss of teeth, causes memory loss and neuronal degeneration. The relationship between mastication and cognition has also been researched in human studies, but a cause-effect relationship is not yet evident. It is likely that multiple factors play a role in this relationship, such as self-care, nutrition, stress and pain.
Ouderen, vooral diegenen met dementie, hebben een grote kans op mondproblemen zoals orofaciale pijn en het verlies van gebitselementen. Een mogelijke verklaring hiervoor is dat de cognitieve en motorische beperkingen als gevolg van de dementie leiden tot verminderde zelfzorg en daarmee ook tot een slechtere mondgezondheid. Een alternatieve theorie is dat cognitie en mondgezondheid elkaar beïnvloeden. Uit dieronderzoeken blijkt dat vermindering van de kauwactiviteit, bijvoorbeeld door gemalen voedsel te eten of door tandverlies, leidt tot verminderde geheugenfuncties en neuronale degeneratie. In humane onderzoeken is de relatie tussen kauwen en cognitie ook onderzocht, maar komt de causaliteit nog niet duidelijk naar voren. Waarschijnlijk spelen meerdere factoren een rol in deze relatie, zoals zelfzorg, voeding, stress en pijn.
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