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Salivary Calcium in Post-menopausal Women and Prevalence of Dental Caries

A

Ajman University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Salivary Calcium

Treatments

Other: Saliva

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05205057
ABSM/EC22/2018

Details and patient eligibility

About

Different phases of a woman's life are puberty, menses, pregnancy, and menopause. Menopause is one of the normal developmental stages in a woman's life, marks the permanent cessation of menstruation. It occurs due to irreversible changes in the hormones.The gradual variation and circulating sex hormones affect women's psychological balance and quality of life. The hormonal changes affect the reproductory system and affect the bone integrity and overall health of the individual. The only source of oocytes in women is an ovary. That is the primary source of oestrogens and progesterone, majorly the androgens. Therefore, various systemic health concerns like vasomotor symptoms, cardiovascular diseases, cancer, sexual problems, osteoporosis, and poor oral health

Full description

The presence of estrogen receptors detected through immunohistochemistry in the oral cavity plays a significant role in associating the effect of post-menopausal conditions to variations in the oral environment like salivary hypofunction, oral discomfort, and oral mucosal disorders. The vaginal mucosa and oral mucosa are similar histologically due to stratified squamous epithelium and desquamative growth pattern. Therefore, the variation in hormonal status in post-menopausal women may lead to the proliferation and maturation of oral epithelium in response to circulating estrogens. The keratinocytes and fibroblasts in the gingival tissues are majorly targeted by estrogen leading to periodontitis, fibroblastic hyperplasia, and desquamatic lesions. Therefore, it is a proven fact that gingiva is a traditional estrogen target, leading to the destruction of supporting structures of a tooth, causing periodontitis and thereby exposing tooth structure. Another primary oral manifestation in menopausal women is xerostomia/dryness of the mouth. The salivary components provide defense by maintaining the desired pH and decreasing the prevalence of caries, but estrogen levels directly decrease the salivary flow rate. Thus, the prevalent acidic pH causes demineralization and destruction of enamel, dentin making it more susceptible to dental caries.

A correlation between bone mineral density, salivary calcium levels, and estrogen levels is already established. Hence, the salivary calcium levels can indicate increased demineralization of tooth surface and osteoporosis in menopausal. Hence, the present focuses on estimating salivary calcium levels and their association with the prevalence of dental caries in post-menopausal women.

Enrollment

80 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

40 to 70 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • No metabolic disorders
  • No medications taken in the past 3 months
  • No periodontal disease

Exclusion criteria

  • Periodontal disease present
  • Metabolic disease present
  • Medications taken in the past 3 months

Trial design

80 participants in 2 patient groups

Pre-menopausal
Description:
Pre-menopausal women
Treatment:
Other: Saliva
Post-menopausal women
Description:
post-menopausal women
Treatment:
Other: Saliva

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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