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Nutrition for Oral and Dental Health . Oral Health. Diet and nutrition play a key role in —Tooth development —Gingival and oral tissue integrity —Bone strength —Prevention and management of diseases of the oral cavity. Effects of Nutrient Deficiencies on Tooth Development.
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Oral Health • Diet and nutrition play a key role in —Tooth development —Gingival and oral tissue integrity —Bone strength —Prevention and management of diseases of the oral cavity
Dental and Oral Health • Teeth are made from protein matrix that is mineralized with collagen (requiring vitamin C), calcium, and phosphorus (requiring vitamins D and A)
Dental Caries • Infectious disease of teeth in which organic acid metabolites lead to gradual demineralization of enamel; proteolytic destruction of tooth structure • Any tooth surface can be affected.
The Decay Process • Plaque formation: sticky mix of microorganisms, protein, polysaccharides • Bacteria metabolizing fermentable carbohydrate produce acid • Acid production: oral pH<5.5 allows tooth demineralization • Saliva function: rinses away food; neutralizes acid; promotes remineralization • Caries patterns:pattern depends on cause
Early Childhood Caries • Also called “baby bottle tooth decay” • Nursing bottle caries—putting baby to bed with a bottle of sweetened liquid (juice, Kool-Aid, etc.) • Front teeth rapidly develop caries • Common among Native Americans • Wean children before age 2 from bottle
Early Childhood Caries (From Swartz MH. Textbook of Physical Diagnosis, History, and Examination, 3rd ed. Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders, 1998.)
Dental Caries—cont’d • Streptococcus mutans—most common bacteria involved • Fermentable Carbohydrate • Time • Drop in salivary pH to below 5.5
Dental Caries—cont’d • Cariogenicity of foods • Frequency of consumption of fermentable Carbohydrate • Food form—slowly dissolving • Food combinations • Nutrient composition of food/beverages • Timing (end of meal)
Medical Sequelae of Dental Caries • Bacteria from tooth decay can enter bloodstream and inoculate heart valves, cause bacterial endocarditis • Oral-pharyngeal secretions inoculated with bacteria can cause aspiration pneumonia
Fluoride • Primary anticaries agent • Water fluoridation • Fluoridated toothpastes • Oral rinses • Dentrifices • Beverages made with fluoridated water
Recommendations for Fluoride Supplementation (Data from American Dietetic Association: Position of ADA: The impact of fluoride on dental health. J. Am Diet Assoc. 94:1428, 1994.) * Milligrams of supplemental fluoride recommended according to fluoride concentration in drinking water.
Cariogenic vs. Cariostatic • Cariogenic: containing fermentable carbohydrates that can cause a decrease in salivary pH to <5.5 and demineralization when in contact with microorganisms in the mouth; promoting caries development • Cariostatic: not metabolized by microorganisms in plaque to cause a drop in salivary pH to <5.5
Cariogenic Foods • Promote formation of caries • Fermentable carbohydrates, those that can be broken down by salivary amylase • Result in lower mouth pH • Include crackers, chips, pretzels, cereals, breads, fruits, sugars, sweets, desserts
Cariostatic Foods • Foods that do not contribute to decay • Do not cause a drop in salivary pH • Includes protein foods, eggs, fish, meat and poultry; most vegetables, fats, sugarless gums
Anticariogenic Foods • Prevent plaque from recognizing an acidogenic food when it is eaten first • May increase salivation or have antimicrobial activity • Includes xylitol (sweetener in sugarless gum) and cheeses
Other Factors that Affect Diet Carogenicity • Consistency: Liquids are cleared quickly while sticky foods remain on the teeth • Meal frequency: frequent meals and snacks increase duration of exposure • Food composition • Food form: liquid, solid, slowly dissolving • Sequence of eating: cheese or milk at the end of the meal decrease the cariogenicity of the meal
Periodontal Disease • Inflammation of the gingiva with destruction of the tooth attachment apparatus • Gingivitis—early form • Nutritional care involves increasing vitamin C, folate, and zinc
Tooth Loss and Dentures • Tooth loss—denture placement • Food selections change • Saliva production decreases • Reduced chewing ability • Lower calorie and nutrient intake occurs for many • Simple nutrition counseling; Food Guide Pyramid, etc.
Oral Manifestations of Disease • Stomatitis: inflammation of oral mucosa • Candidiasis and herpes simplex: fungal and viral infections which can affect mouth and esophagus causing pain and dysphagia Photo: http://webpages.marshall.edu/~gain/bactnote/Image9.gif
Oral Manifestations of Disease • Xerostomia: Dry mouth • Periodontal disease • Kaposi’s sarcoma—lesions in mouth and esophagus; associated with AIDS Kaposi’s Sarcoma in AIDS
MNT for Mouth Pain/Oral Infections • Avoid acidic and spicy foods • Offer soft, cold, nutrient dense foods such as canned fruit, ice cream, yogurt, cottage cheese • Try oral supplements • Use PEG or NG feeding if oral supplementation is unsuccessful • For xerostomia, try artificial salivas, citrus beverages, sugar free candies or gums
Dental Health Affects Nutrition • Tooth loss may affect ability to chew (relationship between loss of teeth and reduced intake of fruits and vegetables • Dentures are often ill-fitting (especially common after weight loss); problem foods include fresh fruits and vegetables, chewy and crusty breads and chewy meat like steak
Interventions • Obtain a dental consult: if dentures are missing, find them. If they are loose, replace or reline them • Modify diet consistency: mechanical soft, ground, pureed • Use least restrictive diet possible; individualize; mix consistencies if appropriate
MNT for Wired or Broken Jaw • Provide pureed, strained, or blenderized foods as appropriate • Encourage nutrient-dense foods such as blenderized casseroles • Recommend small, frequent meals with oral supplements such as milkshakes, Instant Breakfast, medical nutritionals • Use liquid vitamin supplement if necessary • Recommend patient weigh self to monitor weight status
Dysphagia = difficulty swallowing • Mechanical causes • Trauma to esophagus with scar tissue • Inelasticity due to repeated inflammation • Tumor of esophagus • Aneurism of aorta
Dysphagia = difficulty swallowing Neuromuscular causes • CVA, brain tumors • Head injury • Parkinson’s disease, MS, ALS • Achalasia (cardiospasm) • Spinal cord injury
Dysphagia • Oral phase problems Pocketing food Drinking from cup or straw Drooling • Pharyngeal phase Gagging Choking Nasal regurgitation • Esophageal phase Obstruction
Symptoms of Dysphagia • Drooling, choking, coughing during or after meals • Inability to suck from a straw • Holding pockets of food in cheeks (pt may be unaware) • Absent gag reflex • Chronic upper respiratory infections • Gargly voice quality or moist cough after eating
Diagnosis of Dysphagia • Nerve assessment • X-rays • Fluoroscopic swallow study: barium swallow/cookie swallow • Measurement of esophageal sphincter pressure and peristalsis
Aspiration • Inhalation of food, liquid into lungs • Can cause aspiration pneumonia • Appears to be dose-dependent • A major cause of aspiration pneumonia is thought to be aspiration of oropharyngeal secretions, particularly if contaminated by bacteria
MNT for Dysphagia (National Dysphagia Diet) Intervention depends on severity of deficit • Mealtime supervision, cueing • Thickened liquids: thin » nectarlike » honeylike » spoon thick • Altered consistency: • Level 1: pureed • Level 2: mechanically altered • Level 3: advanced
MNT for Dysphagia • In severe cases, patient may be made NPO and enteral feedings initiated
National Dysphagia Diet • NDD diets are more restrictive than dental consistency diets; may wish to use more liberal diet for edentulous patients • Developed by consensus committee; no evidence as yet that it is effective in preventing aspiration • Provides much-needed standardization
NDD: Level 1 -- Pureed • Foods are totally pureed; no coarse textures or lumps of any kind • Breads must be pureed or pregelled, slurried through entire product thickness • Cereals should be homogeneous or “pudding-like;” such as cream of wheat, cream of rice, farina; avoid oatmeal • Fruits pureed without pulp, seeds, skins; juice should be thickened to desired consistency • Soups should be pureed, strained, and thickened to desired consistency • Mashed potatoes and pureed pasta are main starches
NDD Level 2 – Mechanically Altered • Foods are soft-textured and moist so they easily form a bolus • Breads must be slurried, pre-gelled through entire thickness, but well-moistened pancakes are allowed • Cooked cereals may have some textures and some try, well-moistened cereals allowed • Soft canned or cooked fruits, no seeds or skins • Ground or minced tender meats with no larger than ¼ inch pieces, well-cooked casseroles, cottage cheese; avoid peanut butter, sandwiches, pizza • Most soups • Soft, well-cooked vegetables with less than ½ inch pieces; no corn, peas, fibrous varieties
NDD Level 3 -- Advanced • Nearly normal textures, but exclude crunchy, sticky, hard foods • Foods should be bite-sized and moist • Moist, tender meats and casseroles with small pieces • Most vegetables except corn • Potatoes, rice, stuffing allowed • All beverages if they meet ordered consistency • Moist breads allowed; no tough, crusty bread • Most desserts allowed, no nuts, seeds, pineapple, coconut, dried fruit
Strategies for Improving Acceptance • Thickened liquids: commercial products can improve quality and consistency of thickened liquids • Seasoning: persons with dysphagia often have dulled sense of taste. Serve seasoned foods such as spaghetti, chili, apple pie • Piping and molding: pureed foods can be thickened and molded for more attractive appearance
Dysphagia Diet Issues • Patients on altered consistencies tend to eat less and often lose weight • Patients on thickened liquids are at risk for dehydration • Re-evaluate patients and advance diet as quickly as possible