Articles & Studies
Nuns Provide Key Insight on Aging: Oral Health and Dementia
A recent finding of the Nun Study identifies oral disease as a potential risk factor for dementia, with conclusions indicating that a low number of teeth — fewer than ten — may be an accurate predictor of dementia in later life. Furthermore, the study showed that subjects with the fewest number of teeth presented with the most severe incidence of dementia.
Funded by the National Institute on Aging as well as a number of private foundations, the Nun Study is an endeavor of the Sanders-Brown Center on Aging at the University of Kentucky Chandler Medical Center intended to further research on Alzheimer’s disease and other diseases and disorders associated with the aging process. Many, if not most, studies of aging have historically focused on middle-aged, white males, and the Nun Study provides an opportunity to study women exclusively. Limitations in studies on Alzheimer’s patients often include the inability of subjects to recall information about earlier life choices and arrangements. The Nun Study is uniquely able to compensate for this probability with the contents of the convent archives, which provide records about birthplace, family history, as well as autobiographies written in mid-lives. Additionally, the sisters provide a number of built-in control factors: they live very similar lifestyles, including not smoking, drinking very little if at all, and all have similar housing, marital and reproductive statuses, occupations (approximately 85% of the sisters are or were teachers), and have similar access to health care.
The participating nuns are Roman Catholic sisters from the School Sisters of Notre Dame drawn from seven religious provinces across the United States. The 678 participants have all pledged to donate their brains to the study upon their deaths, as post-humus examination of the brain allows the researchers to accurately determine whether Alzheimer’s disease was indicated pathologically. This information is coupled with clinical indicators, such as memory loss, impairment in language, and/or impairment in social functioning to support a positive diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease. The subjects were all between the ages of 75 and 102 when the study began. Each year, the participants are assessed in terms of cognitive and physical function, and submit to medical exams and blood tests which look at genetic and nutritive factors in aging.
The study identifying a link between oral health and dementia is only the most recent finding to be published out of the Nun Study. Other investigations have provided important information about Alzheimer’s disease and aging. One study provided a definitive neuropathological method to distinguish Alzheimer’s patients from control patients. Another utilized autobiographies gleaned from the convent archives which were written by the subjects at the age of 22. This study showed that a lower measure of linguistic ability demonstrated at this early age was correlated with higher degrees of impairment, cerebral atrophy, and clinical diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease.
Reference
Stein, P., Desrosiers, M., Donegan, S., Yepes, J., and Kryscio, R. (2007). Tooth loss, dementia and neuropathology in the Nun Study. Journal of the American Dental Association , 138, 1314-1322.
Link to the Nun Study Web site.
Related Articles
Saturday, August 30, 2008
- The Anti-Psychiatry Movement
- Vaccines - A Two-Edged Sword
- Should Doctors Have Guns?
- Extremist Muslim Doctors Do More Than Heal
- Woman Comparable to Men in Domestic Violence: Stereotypes and their Consequences
- The Bipolar Trend
- The Implications of Implanted Chips
- Anti-Smoking Campaign Doesn't Mess Around
- The Biopsychosocial Model of Health & Illness
- Unhinging from Theory: Autism and Opinions
- God And Religion: Is It All In Our Heads?
- The Science of Brain Freeze
- Encephalon, Thirty-Third Edition
- Meditation for Troubled Minds: Can the Mind Heal the Mind?
- Mind-Body: We Want Evidence, Don't We?
- Is War A Psychosis?
- Usually It's Cheaper to Pay Than to Go To Court
- Acknowledging Vaccination Concerns
- Integrating Schizophrenia Management
- Rabies Virus Helps Deliver Drugs into the Brain
- When the Doctor is the Patient
- The Gift of Life - Part 2
- Drugs and Pharmacology, Tenth Edition
- Are Drug Reps Really Necessary?
- Can Drug Therapy Prevent Parkinson’s Disease?
- Medicine and the Law - Part 6: Third Party Liability
- Go For The Gold, It May Prolong Your Life
- When It Comes to Health, Adults Shortchange Kids
- Is Seeing Into the Future More Than an Optical Illusion?
- Malignant Medicine
- Putting an End to Medicare Fraud
- The Gift of Life - Part 1
- Brain Blogging, Thirty-Eight Edition
- The Mental Health of our Military
- Will Money Improve NYC’s Health?
- Culturally Competent Care - Are Health Care Providers Doing Enough?
- Conflicts of Interest Among Physicians II
- How To Talk To Kids About Sex
- Sleep and Consciousness - A Dynamic State of Being
- HIV-Positive? Start Meditating
- I can't stop the N=1 studies on myself with free Lyrica samples....
- This is really great information. I just recently signed up to be on the regist...
- Thank you! My son recently had a bone marrow transplant and I stand in awe of a...
- Thanks for including my IC Disease site in the blog carnival! I posted a link b...
- Hey thanks for the addition to the carnival - much appreciated!!
Barry B...
- Please reread the article. The chip contains a 16 digit ID number, the equivale...
- Are Drug Reps Really Necessary?
No.
But I sure do miss the great food we u...
- There is certainly a trend in being diagnosed bi-polar. Hollywood underlies tha...
- To respond to your questions...
Q: Are people merely misinformed?
A: Yes...
- Curbside...I had a doctor do that after I discovered that my parathyroid measure...
- I have read all your articles concerning medicine and law. You provided here rat...
- The only two drugs that are mood stabilizers used to treat biopolar depression (...
- To the God who heals:
Dear God,
I know lots of people who could...
- Hi JR,
I don't have any children to influence, so the only one I'm currently ...
- There is a lot more to be discovered about the placebo effect, especially in the...
- In Delaware County, PA where I was an intern, the insurance companies were ruthl...
- It always amazes me that malpractice is so low among lawyers compared to doctors...
- how many days lithium take o recover fully
is there any drug above aithium for ...
- This new diagnostic method of near-infrared optical spectroscopy is a great brea...
- But of course, the correct answer is that both systems compensa...
Advertisement
Sponsored Links
Online Criminal Justice Degrees, Insurance, Home Loans, Free Movies, California DUI Lawyer, Tattoo, Health Insurance, Drug Rehabilitation, Mesothelioma Lawyer, Hydroxycut, Custom Rubber Stamps, 16th Birthday Gift , mesothelioma cancer , Characteristics Libra , vehicle tracking , vasectomy reversal , Plano Family Lawyer , funny t-shirts , Free Insurance Quotes.
Neuroscience & Neurology
August 25, 2008 | 0 Comments | By Jennifer Gibson, PharmD
Can Drug Therapy Prevent Parkinson’s Disease?
More In Neuroscience & Neurology
- Is Seeing Into the Future More Than an Optical Illusion?
- When Age Is Just A Number
- Virtual Reality - New Steps in Stroke Rehabilitation
- The Science of Brain Freeze
- Blood Glucose and the Brain: Sugar and Short-Term Memory
Neuroscience & Neurology
Opinion
August 27, 2008 | 2 Comments | By Sajid Surve, DO
The Gift of Life - Part 2
More In Opinion
- Are Drug Reps Really Necessary?
- Malignant Medicine
- The Gift of Life - Part 1
- Medical Students Can Make A Difference
- Can this Economic Downturn Lead to Better Psychosocial Health?
Opinion
Psychiatry & Psychology
August 15, 2008 | 2 Comments | By Jennifer Gibson, PharmD
The Mental Health of our Military
More In Psychiatry & Psychology
- Sleep and Consciousness - A Dynamic State of Being
- Finding New Ways to Treat Depression
- Dying To Be A Good Mom - Eating Disorders In Pregnancy
- The State of Mental Healthcare in Prison
- Treating Psychiatric Disorders - Something Smells Fishy


Leave a Reply