Psoriasis is associated with periodontitis, a chronic inflammation of the gingival tissue. However, data about periodontal and dental status of psoriasis patients are sparse. Therefore, we conducted a prospective study comparing psoriasis patients with control individuals. 100 psoriasis patients presenting at the outpatient service of a specialized psoriasis center and 101 nonpsoriatic control individuals were included in the study. Oral health was assessed with standardized measures including Bleeding on Probing, Community Periodontal Index, and dental parameters according to the DMFT index (a cumulative index in which teeth [T] are registered as decayed [D], missing [M], and filled [F]). For analysis, a postmatching strategy was applied with 53 pairs of psoriasis patients and nonpsoriatic individuals in which relevant factors with possible impact on oral health status were considered. Logistic regression analyses were executed on the entire psoriasis and control population. According to the results, the matched psoriasis group had significantly higher values on Bleeding on Probing and the Community Periodontal Index compared with matched control individuals. Logistic regression analyses identified significant correlations of the psoriasis group with high Bleeding on Probing and Community Periodontal Index values but not, however, with missing teeth. Psoriasis patients had significantly higher values for parameters addressing periodontal inflammation. Psoriasis management should, therefore, include regular dental checks on periodontal status and respective treatment where required.
Background While there is increasing evidence for the relevance of psychosocial variables such as dental fear or psychological attachment in dentistry, much less is known about the mechanisms that determine the strength of those associations. One potential moderator is the occurrence of a comorbid chronic disease such as psoriasis, which is linked to relevant disease parameters such as periodontal inflammation. The aim of the study was to test a moderation model of the relationship between dental fear, psychological attachment and psoriasis on periodontal health. Methods A total of 201 patients (100 with psoriasis, 101 without psoriasis) were included in a questionnaire-based, cross-sectional study. Dental status was measured with the Community Periodontal Index (CPI), dental fear was measured with the Hierarchical Anxiety Questionnaire (HAQ), and psychological attachment was measured with the Relationship Questionnaire (RQ). In addition to the examination of main effects, bootstrapping-based analyses were conducted to test the moderating influence of psychological attachment on the association between CPI and dental fear, gain moderated by group (with vs. without psoriasis). Results Controlling for several covariates, higher CPI scores were associated with higher levels of dental fear only in individuals without psoriasis under conditions of higher levels of psychological attachment anxiety and lower levels of attachment avoidance. Conclusion In individuals without psoriasis, psychological attachment can moderate the association between periodontal health and dental fear. This may provide a useful framework for reducing dental fear through interventions on the level of the dentist-patient relationship.
Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory disease associated with risk factors such as obesity, tobacco smoking and significant comorbidity including diabetes or periodontitis. 1 Depression, bipolar mood disorder, anxiety, psychosis, cognitive impairment, personality disorders, eating disorders and suicidal ideation have been linked to psoriasis. 2 Because psoriasis does not manifest on mucosal surfaces, the oral cavity is rarely inspected during routine dermatological investigations. Attachment theory provides a model for predicting how individuals use interpersonal relationships to manage distress, relating to stress management skills, health behaviour, adherence to medical treatment and patient-physician interaction across the lifespan. 3 Different attachment styles can be distinguished: secure, fearful, preoccupied and dismissing, whereas the last three styles are grouped into an insecure style. Secure individuals trust others to be available in times of distress and seek proximity to others when needed. Insecure individuals are either uncomfortable relying on and getting close to others in times of need, or view themselves as insufficient with respect to self-regulatory competence, struggling for proximity and attention. Attachment insecurity may narrow health-related regulatory strategies, serve as a distal risk factor concerning stress regulation, and it is directly linked to chronic somatic health conditions. Dental fear describes the 'proximal' anxiety-related reaction to common patients' experiences in dentistry, leading to avoidance of interventions and ultimately poor dental status. 4 Psychological attachment is related to chronic diseases but also to oral health parameters, 5 and dental fear is linked to health behaviour relevant for dentistry. As patients with psoriasis have a higher risk for a poor oral health status, 6 we investigated differences in dental fear and psychological attachment in patients with and without psoriasis as well as associations between those variables and dental/psoriasis disease indices in the group of patients with psoriasis. Within the context of a questionnaire-based cross-sectional survey, psoriasis severity (PASI), dental fear (Hierarchical Anxiety Questionnaire, HAQ 8) and psychological attachment (Relationship Questionnaire, RQ 91) were assessed in a sample of 201 patients with and without psoriasis (100/101) in addition to the analysis of their oral health status. 8 In a first step, we tested a possible difference of the sum scores of the HAQ between individuals with vs. without psoriasis, while controlling for the covariates age, smoking, body mass index (BMI) and decay-missing-filled index
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.