Biopsychosocial factors in oral and systemic diseases: a scoping review.

IF 3 Q1 DENTISTRY, ORAL SURGERY & MEDICINE Frontiers in oral health Pub Date : 2024-05-30 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.3389/froh.2024.1378467
Abby L J Hensel, Kathryn Nicholson, Kelly K Anderson, Noha A Gomaa
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Abstract

Background: The association between chronic oral diseases and other major systemic health conditions, commonly referred to as the oral-systemic health connection, has been previously studied with several underlying common risk factors and pathways linking both groups of diseases. Psychosocial factors contribute to an increased susceptibility to chronic oral and non-oral diseases. The aim of this review is to summarize the current state of knowledge on the role of psychosocial stress in chronic oral and systemic diseases.

Methods: A search strategy was built and a literature search was conducted using four databases (CINAHL, Embase, Medline, PsycINFO). A combination of search terms related to psychosocial stress, systemic disease, and oral conditions were used. Studies were eligible for inclusion if they included human adults (aged 18 years and older), included psychosocial factors as an exposure measure, and outcome measures of both an oral and systemic condition. Only English-language articles were considered. Pilot testing of the data extraction form and calibration were conducted and data were extracted independently by one researcher.

Results: A total of fifteen articles out of eighty full-text articles screened were determined to be eligible for inclusion in this review. Periodontal disease was the most commonly studied oral disease, measured in 53% of included articles, with the most commonly studied systemic diseases being of mental health conditions (40%) and diabetes (47%). Psychosocial stress was measured using a range of psychometric indicators and/or biomarkers, including perceived stress, individual behaviours, childhood adversity, and cortisol. In total, fourteen studies found a positive association between measures of psychosocial stress and oral-systemic health.

Conclusion: Psychosocial stress may be a common contributor to both chronic oral and non-oral diseases.

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口腔和全身性疾病的生物心理社会因素:范围综述。
背景:慢性口腔疾病与其他主要系统性健康问题之间的关联(通常称为口腔-系统健康关联)已被研究过,有几个潜在的共同风险因素和途径将这两类疾病联系起来。社会心理因素导致慢性口腔疾病和非口腔疾病的易感性增加。本综述旨在总结目前关于社会心理压力在慢性口腔疾病和全身性疾病中的作用的知识现状:制定了检索策略,并使用四个数据库(CINAHL、Embase、Medline、PsycINFO)进行了文献检索。使用了与社会心理压力、系统性疾病和口腔状况相关的检索词组合。只要研究对象为成年人(18 岁及以上),将社会心理因素作为暴露测量指标,并同时对口腔和系统疾病进行结果测量,就符合纳入条件。仅考虑英语文章。对数据提取表进行了试点测试和校准,并由一名研究人员独立提取数据:在筛选出的 80 篇全文文章中,共有 15 篇文章被确定符合纳入本综述的条件。牙周病是最常被研究的口腔疾病,53%的收录文章对其进行了测量,最常被研究的全身性疾病是精神健康状况(40%)和糖尿病(47%)。心理社会压力是通过一系列心理测量指标和/或生物标志物来测量的,包括感知压力、个人行为、童年逆境和皮质醇。共有 14 项研究发现,社会心理压力与口腔系统健康之间存在正相关:结论:社会心理压力可能是慢性口腔疾病和非口腔疾病的共同诱因。
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CiteScore
3.30
自引率
0.00%
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0
审稿时长
13 weeks
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