“Dementia is associated with a change in health habits, including
two major ones - diet and teeth cleaning,” said Robert Emanuel of
Sussex Community NHS Foundation Trust in Sussex in the UK, a
specialty care dentist who is often consulted to help patients with
late-stage dementia.
Sometimes their teeth are nearly untreatable, he said.
“Especially when patients go to residential care, they tend to have
a more sugary diet and have problems cleaning their teeth,” he told
Reuters Health by phone. “If not looked after, their teeth can
deteriorate quite quickly.”

Emanuel and colleague Anne Sorensen of Brighton and Sussex Medical
School surveyed 51 patients about 10 weeks after these individuals
had received a dementia diagnosis. They asked whether patients were
registered with a dentist and if they received preventive dental
care.
Forty-one patients, or 80 percent, were registered or seen regularly
by a dentist, and 35 said they had been to the dentist in the past
year. About half of the patients attended regular hygienist
sessions.
At the same time, however, preventive care appeared to be lacking.
Most patients didn’t receive diet advice or oral hygiene
instructions. Most also weren’t offered fluoride treatments,
particularly fluoride varnishes, which can help prevent cavities and
tooth decay.
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“With dementia patients, we tend to be treatment-oriented and
there’s not as much talk of prevention,” Emanuel said. “Early in the
disease, we should build positive habits so patients don’t forget
what their dentists advise.”
“It has been said, ‘Oral health is the gateway to quality of care
and everyday life at old age,’” said Stefan Renvert of Kristianstad
University in Sweden, who researches oral health in dementia
patients living in residential facilities.
Renvert, who wasn’t involved in the current study, is working to
develop devices that might help people with cognitive decline
maintain their oral health.
This year, he and his colleagues will test electronic toothbrushes
that can remind patients how to brush their teeth thoroughly and
record information that dentists can use, Renvert said in an email.
Caregivers for people with dementia can find dental care advice
online from The Family Caregiver Alliance (http://bit.ly/2GJzy8i)
and the Alzheimer’s Association (http://bit.ly/2GMYBYq).
SOURCE: http://go.nature.com/2GJzPYS British Dental Journal, online
January 12, 2018.
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