Healthcare (Jun 2021)

Masticatory Force in Relation with Age in Subjects with Full Permanent Dentition: A Cross-Sectional Study

  • Ottavia Poli,
  • Licia Manzon,
  • Tarcisio Niglio,
  • Evaristo Ettorre,
  • Iole Vozza

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9060700
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 6
p. 700

Abstract

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Masticatory performance is directly correlated with masticatory muscle work to grind and cut the food. Chewing efficacy is decisive to eating a variety of foods needed maintain general health status at all ages. Older people have oral problems that get worse with age. Elders have more pathologies such as periodontal diseases, caries, tooth loss and inadequate dental prostheses than younger subjects. Objectives: to investigate the correlation between masticatory bite force (MBF) and body mass index (BMI) vs. aging and sex. Methods: This study was performed on 426 subjects (213 females plus 213 male) assigned into five different groups by age. Group “A” aged from 20 to 35 years; group “B” aged 45–59 years; group “C” aged 60–69 years; group “D” aged 70–79 years; and group “E” aged more than 79 years. Results: There were not statistically significant differences in right-side MBF versus left-side MBF. The differences between sex were statistically significant with a stronger bite in males than females (p p 25) had an MBF higher than less corpulent subjects (BMI p p < 0.001). Conclusion: The results in our study confirm data from many scientific papers. The importance of the present paper was to correlate data between and within a large sample with a wide range of ages. Our sample subjects had a 31%–33% decrease in MBF from group “A” to group “E” group, but they all had full permanent dentation and they preserved a valid MBF.

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