Background: Sleep disturbance is one of the major and unsolved problems in older people. Most of the previous sleep studies rely on self-reported documents, and memory disturbance in older people might bias sleep complaints and health status. Objective: Sleep disturbances were studied as a mortality risk. Methods: In 272 patients who were aged, infirmed and chronically institutionalized in a skilled-care geriatric hospital, the presence or absence of sleep disturbances were examined by hourly observations of patients over 2 weeks at baseline, and they were prospectively followed up for 2 years to assess mortality. Results: Mortality after 2 years was significantly higher in the nighttime insomnia, daytime sleepiness, and sleep-onset delay groups. Further, adjusted for age, gender and activities of daily living status, the presence of nighttime insomnia and sleep-onset delay remained associated with a higher risk of mortality. Conclusion: Sleep disturbance may be one of the symptoms indicating poor health or functional deficits, and be an independent risk factor for survival.
Tooth loss is a risk factor for pneumonia mortality, but it is unclear whether oral care negates excess mortality due to pneumonia among community-dwelling elderly with tooth loss. The purpose of this study was to examine the influence of oral care on the association between the number of remaining teeth and the risk of pneumonia death. We analyzed for 18,098 individuals (aged ≥ 65 years) participating in a prospective cohort study. In a 2006 baseline survey, the following data were collected: the number of remaining teeth, oral care, history of disease, smoking, alcohol drinking, education level and so forth. We also obtained data on dates and causes of death between 2006 and 2014. The primary outcome was mortality due to pneumonia. Compared with those having ≥ 20 teeth, the risk of pneumonia mortality was increased among participants having 10-19 or 0-9 teeth; the multivariate hazard ratios (HRs) (95% confidence intervals [CI]) were 1.45 (1.03-2.04) and 1.38 (1.01-1.87), respectively. Among those having 0-9 teeth, a significantly increased risk of mortality due to pneumonia was disappeared for those who brushed their teeth ≥ 2 times per day, for those with visiting a dentist, and for those with use of denture, whereas the risk persisted among those who brushed their teeth ≤ 2 times per day, for those without visiting a dentist, and for those without use of denture. Tooth-brushing, visiting a dentist or use of denture may negate the increased risk of pneumonia death among the elderly with tooth loss.
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