Cognitive Changes and Neural Correlates After Rehabilitation of Masticatory Function in Elderly -an Intervention Study

  • STATUS
    Recruiting
  • End date
    Dec 30, 2025
  • participants needed
    80
  • sponsor
    Folktandvården Stockholms län AB
Updated on 19 February 2024
mini-mental state examination
dementia
mental state examination
cognitive changes
prosthetic rehabilitation

Summary

Today in elderly tooth loss and loss of oral function is widespread, but it is an underexplored modifiable risk factor potentially contributing to the development of dementia. In this interventional study we want to investigate a "cause-effect" relationship between mastication and cognition in humans.

A total of eighty (80) participants, 65-80 years of age, indicated for prosthodontic rehabilitation will be randomly assigned to either the experimental or the control group. Participants will be randomized into two different groups, measurements are going to be conducted before and after prosthetic rehabilitation. The difference between the two groups is that the control group are going to do two measurements before undergoing the rehabilitation, this to control for the test-re-test effect.

The aim with this study is to determine if the rehabilitation of chewing function will cause changes in the neurocognitive assessments of episodic memory and learning.

Description

  • Dementia is a general term of several neurodegenerative diseases that jointly affects approximately 7% of the general population older than 65 years, and 30% older than 80 years (O'Brien, 2003). Importantly, these statistics are expected to almost double every 20 years (Prince, 2013), making disorders of cognition a priority for healthcare (O'Brien, 2014).
    • Animal and human studies have shown associations with mastication and cognitive function through the medial temporal lobe (i.e., hippocampus) and its role in learning and memory. (Ono, 2010. Weijenberg, 2011. Ohkubo, 2012. Teixeira, 2014. Klineberg, 2014)
    • Although tooth loss and loss of oral function is widespread in older people, it is still an underexplored modifiable risk factor contributing to the development of dementia.
    • We aim to conduct an intervention study on elderly people where rehabilitation of masticatory functions is performed and evaluated, with cognitive measures and brain imaging, to investigate a "cause-effect" relationship between mastication and cognition in humans.
    • Our hypothesis is that rehabilitation of masticatory function will improve cognition primarily in the performance of episodic memory and executive function tests along with the corresponding neural changes mainly in hippocampus and prefrontal cortex.
    • A total of eighty (80) participants, 65-80 years of age, indicated for prosthodontic rehabilitation at Eastmaninstitutet (Stockholm, Sweden) will be randomly assigned to either the experimental or the control group. The difference between the groups is that the participants in the experimental group will begin with the rehabilitation immediately after the first measurement while the control group will do one more measurement before the onset of the rehabilitation procedure. The two measurements conducted before treatment in the control group are to rule out for test-retest effects. Three months and one year after completed prosthodontic treatment participants will conduct the last measurements, as a post-test to evaluate potential treatment effect.
    • The neuropsychological assessments will be conducted together with MRI assessments, oral health-related quality of life instrument, chewing function test (two coloured chewing gum) and saliva samples recorded at different time points (i.e., pre-test, post-test 1, post-test 2, post-test 3) in both the groups.
    • The data from the study will be entered in a Microsoft Excel sheet and exported to Statistics is a software package SPSS Inc, Statistica, StatSoft Inc (or similar advanced analytics software package for analysis). The result from the cognitive testing will be analysed as repeated measure Analysis of covariance (ANCOVAs) with groups (experimental and control) and time (pre- and post-rehabilitation) as factors. Group-by-time interaction, main effect of group, and main effect of time will be evaluated. To compare the magnitude of gains, the effect size (partial eta-square) will also be calculated. We will use time-length between pre- and post-tests as a covariate of interest with aiming to better control group differences. To predict the intervention outcomes, we will develop models that mainly predicts cognitive test measures (neuropsychological assessments). Predictive ability is defined as the amount of variance in the outcome that can be explained by pre-test cognitive status (slope method). Explained variance in outcome will be obtained by analysing linear regressions.
    • Preprocessing and statistical analyses of MRI data will be performed with Statistical Parametric Mapping (SPM) run in Matlab (MathWorks). Movement correction will be performed by realign and unwarp to the first image in the series. To consider group-specific anatomical brain differences, all patients will be normalized to Monteral Neurological Institute (MNI) echoplanar-imaging template. Cortical thickness measures will not be normalized but rather used in their raw form. For cortical segmentation, a Freesurfer pipeline will be applied to the MRI images to produce regional cortical thickness and volumetric measures. To investigate rehabilitating-related changes repeated measures ANCOVAs will be performed with the groups (experimental and control) and time (pre- and post-rehabilitation) as factors. We will control for multiple comparisons with the Bonferroni-Holm method.

Details
Condition Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cognitive Decline, Chewing Problem, Degenerative; Dementia, Mastication Disorder, Neurocognitive Dysfunction
Age 65years - 80years
Treatment Oral prosthetic rehabilitation
Clinical Study IdentifierNCT04458207
SponsorFolktandvården Stockholms län AB
Last Modified on19 February 2024

Eligibility

Yes No Not Sure

Inclusion Criteria

-80 years of age at start
Impaired chewing ability (Eichner index B2-B4, C1-C4)
Dental rehabilitation with fixed prosthodontics, implant and/or tooth supported (overdentures included) >10 occluding units
Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE) score >25

Exclusion Criteria

Brain trauma or stroke <6 months
Neurological disease (stroke, dementia, Alzheimer disease, Parkinson disease)
Intellectual disability
Psychological disorders
Participants with chronic pain, depression or sleeping disorders
Daily analgesic medication that may affect cognitive and/or executive performance of the brain
Poor Swedish language skills, reading disabilities
Severely reduced hearing or vision
Prosthetic treatment with removable dentures (full or partial)
MRI exclusion criteria
Claustrophobia
Difficulties in lying down in a supine position for about an hour, or any other difficulties related to the MRI head coil
Participants with metal or medical implants in the body contraindicating MRI scan
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