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Columbia Study Shows Diabetes Can Lead to
Gum Disease In Childhood;
Onset is Much Younger Than
Previously Recognized
Research
Highlights Importance of Early Oral Health Screenings
For
Patients with Diabetes
NEW YORK, NY, February 8, 2006 – New research from Columbia University
Medical Center has shown that the destruction of the gums can start in
diabetic children as young as six years old. While the link
between diabetes and periodontal disease was previously established, it
was believed that the regression of gums began much later and increased
with age.
The study, a collaboration among researchers at the Columbia University
College of Dental Medicine, Mailman School of Public Health and Naomi
Berrie Diabetes Center, is published in the February issue of Diabetes
Care.
“Our research illustrates that programs to prevent and treat
periodontal disease should be considered a standard of care for young
patients with diabetes,” said Ira B. Lamster, D.D.S, M.M.Sc., dean of
the College of Dental Medicine and principal investigator on the study,
which is funded by the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial
Research.
“Other studies have shown that patients with diabetes are significantly
less likely than those without diabetes to have seen a dentist within
the past year,” said Robin Goland, M.D., co-director of the Naomi
Berrie Diabetes Center and a co-author of the paper. “This was
due to a perceived lack of need, so clearly it’s important that
physicians and dentists and their patients with diabetes learn that
they need to focus extra attention on oral health.”
Oral health screenings are offered to all pediatric patients between
the ages of 6 and 18 at the Naomi Berrie Diabetes Center, New York
City’s only comprehensive center for diabetes treatment, education and
research.
The Columbia study clinically assessed dental cavities and periodontal
disease in 182 children and adolescents, ages six to 18 years old, with
diabetes, and 160 nondiabetic control subjects.
The children with diabetes had significantly more dental plaque and
more gingival inflammation than children without diabetes. When
gingivitis is left untreated, it can advance to periodontitis, in which
the attachment of the gum and the supporting bone pull away from the
teeth and form pockets that collect even more plaque. If left
untreated, periodontitis can lead to tooth loss. Early signs of
periodontal disease were found in nearly 60 percent of diabetic
children in the six to 11-year-old group, twice the percentage found in
the nondiabetic children in that age range - far younger than was
previously believed to be affected. In the 12 to 18-year-old
study group, nearly 80 percent of patients with diabetes had early
periodontal changes.
The study is continuing, and will ultimately include 700 total
participants. “It will be extremely interesting to see the
results from the entire cohort and to further explore if specific
diabetes-associated factors are related to the early development of
periodontal disease” said Evanthia Lalla, D.D.S., M.S., associate
professor of dentistry at the College of Dental Medicine and lead
author of the study.
###
Columbia University
Medical Center provides international leadership in pre-clinical
and clinical research, in medical and health sciences education, and in
patient care. The medical center trains future leaders in health care
and includes the dedicated work of many physicians, scientists, nurses,
dentists, and public health professionals at the College of Physicians
& Surgeons, the College of Dental Medicine, the School of Nursing,
the Mailman School of Public Health, the biomedical departments of the
Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, and allied research centers and
institutions. Columbia University Medical Center researchers are
leading the discovery of novel therapies and advances to address a wide
range of health conditions. http://www.cumc.columbia.edu
For more information about the Naomi Berrie Diabetes Center, go to: http://nbdiabetes.org/
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