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eDENT Oral Health- the Gateway to Quality of Care and Everyday Life at Old Age

B

Blekinge Institute of Technology

Status

Completed

Conditions

Mild Cognitive Impairment
Periodontal Diseases
Gingivitis

Treatments

Device: Reminder function on Android computer tablet

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06011564
BTH-6.1.1-0059-2016

Details and patient eligibility

About

The investigators will present a new strategy for working with oral health for the group of elderly people with various degrees of mild cognitive impairments. The investigators hope that by introducing a powered toothbrush with functions that make it possible to remind and gather information about the use, the investigators will primarily facilitate oral care for this group, and are proposing that this will lead to higher quality of life of the persons involved.

Full description

The investigators will present a new strategy for working with oral health for the group of elderly people with various degrees of mild cognitive impairments. The investigators hope that by introducing a powered toothbrush with functions that make it possible to remind and gather information about use, the investigators will primarily facilitate oral care for this group, and are proposing that this will lead to higher quality of life of the persons involved. Secondarily this will have great impact on the care/carer situation as well as the need for reactive dental care. Expected results is to see both how the actual reminders can be designed in order to accommodate for this group, the context of how these reminders can be used and ultimately if this has an impact on oral health for the group of elderly people with various degrees of mild cognitive impairments.

With age, functional decline occurs and the incidence and prevalence of chronic diseases increase, so aging is an important risk for developing medical conditions. Along with age, the prevalence of dementia increases significantly.

Persons with dementia show a higher prevalence of coronal and root caries and present more often with root remnants as the utilization of dental services becomes scarce. Patients with dementia had an increased likelihood of tooth loss and untreated caries, as well as

presenting with poor oral and denture hygiene compared with non-demented persons. In the initial stages of the disease, this condition may be related to a shift in priorities and a reluctance to brush the teeth. In addition, there is the inability to accurately perform oral hygiene measures due to poor motor skills and sacropenia, especially of the hand-grip strength, render oral hygiene measures more difficult to perform. When the disease progresses, patients will become increasingly dependent on supervision/assistance on oral hygiene procedures. Co-operation is required when a carer has to perform oral hygiene measures and access to the mouth has to be granted. Poor oral hygiene and the presence of abundant biofilm fosters periodontal disease and caries. Combined with a shift in dietary intake towards more sweet food-stuffs the risk factors for developing carious lesions increases significantly. The risk of caries is further increased as result of a decreased salivary flow due to medication intake.

Previous research has demonstrated that the use of a powered toothbrush instead of a manual one reduces plaque and gingivitis more effectively than manual toothbrushes . The reduction of gingivitis using an electric toothbrush as compared to a manual one is reported to be in the range of 11 to 17%. According to the American Dental association tooth brushing should be performed twice daily for two minutes each time. On average it is estimated that people brush their teeth for less than a minute per day. The efficacy of a toothbrush is highly dependent on how long time the individual is actually using the device and it can be anticipated that individuals with mild cognitive impairment may forget to use the tooth brush on a daily basis and also that whenever using the brush the time spent may be even shorter than 30 seconds each time. The control group will be supplied with a powered toothbrush only and instructed to use any other means of tooth cleaning (ie. interdental cleaning) as before. It is anticipated that a temporary improvement of oral hygiene will occur in the control group, but the temporary improvement may not be sustainable among individuals with mild cognitive impairment. Accordingly, there will not be an added benefit for either the individual or the society only to supply individuals with cognitive impairment with a powered toothbrush.

In the test group, individuals are supplied with a powered toothbrush and a tablet with reminder functions. It is anticipated that the brush will be used more frequently and possibly also for longer periods compared to the group without such reminder functions, resulting in >30% improvement compared to the control group.

Enrollment

213 patients

Sex

All

Ages

55+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Being 55 years or older
  • Having experienced memory problems in the last six months before inclusion
  • Having a Mini-Mental State Examination score of 20-28
  • Are not receiving any formal care
  • Having at least ten teeth of their own

Exclusion criteria

  • Having a terminal illness with less than three years of expected survival
  • Having another known significant cause of disease explaining cognitive impairment

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

213 participants in 2 patient groups

Intervention
Experimental group
Description:
Reminder function
Treatment:
Device: Reminder function on Android computer tablet
control
No Intervention group
Description:
No reminder

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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