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Resumen de Association Between Periodontitis and Amyloid β Peptide in Elderly People With and Without Cognitive Impairment

José Antonio Gil Montoya, Rocío Barrios Rodríguez, Soraya Santana, Ines Sanchez-Lara, Cristóbal Carnero Pardo, Francisco Fornieles Rubio, Juan Montes, Carlos Ramírez Moreno, Miguel Ángel González Moles, J.S. Burgos

  • Background: Evidence that periodontal disease is a possible risk factor for cognitive impairment may be explained by the inflammatory hypothesis. The aim of this study is to determine whether periodontitis is related to the amyloid b (Ab) load in blood and the role of any such relationship in the association between Ab and cognitive impairment.

    Methods: A case-control study was performed in elderly people diagnosed with cognitive impairment with or without dementia (cases group) and cognitively healthy elderly people (control group); data were collected on the medical and dental history of participants, and blood samples were drawn to determine Ab levels using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay.

    Results: The study included 166 patients and 122 control participants. Higher blood Ab1-42 levels (P = 0.01) and higher Ab42:40 ratio (P = 0.06) were observed in participants with severe attachment loss than in other participants. Periodontitis was a significant interaction variable, given that the association between Ab1-42 and Ab1-40 and cognitive impairment was only observed in patients with severe periodontitis. According to these data, periodontitis may be a modulating variable of the association between Ab and cognitive impairment.

    Conclusions: Plasma Ab1-42 levels are higher in individuals who have severe periodontal disease. The presence of periodontitis may modify the association between Ab and cognitive impairment. J Periodontol 2017;88:1051-1058.


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