Introduction. Oral diseases constitute in Albania a significant public health problem, in a context of rapid socioeconomic transition, unfavorable behavioral determinants, and a growing burden of chronic conditions, with measurable repercussions on oral health outcomes. An integrated assessment of oral health status and systemic conditions was conducted in the adult population. Objectives. To estimate the distribution of oral health indices (active caries, restorations, tooth loss/missing, sound teeth) and to evaluate their association with major chronic diseases and risk factors (hypertension, cardiovascular diseases, glycemia/diabetes, smoking, alcohol), with analyses stratified by age and educational level. Materials and methods. Cross-sectional observational study on a representative sample of adults, stratified by sex, age, area of residence, and socioeconomic status. Data collection included clinical examination, standardized questionnaires, and validated oral health indicators; associations between oral status and systemic conditions were analyzed using multivariable models controlling for major confounders. Results. In the overall sample, hypertension affects about one quarter of participants and exceeds one half in ages ≥60 years; maj or behavioral risk factors (smoking and alcohol) are widespread. Profiles with hypertension and cardiovascular diseases show less favorable oral outcomes, with greater tooth loss and lower proportions of sound teeth compared with other groups; moreover, active caries show peaks in specific clinical subgroups. A marked socio-educational gradient emerges, with worse conditions at lower levels of education. Conclusions. Chronic multimorbidity is associated with worse oral health outcomes, especially in older age groups and among socially disadvantaged populations. The evidence supports the adoption of integrated prevention and care programs between dentistry and internal medicine, prioritizing vulnerable individuals and older adults. Acknowledgments. Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Sciences, Sapienza University of Rome.
Introduzione. Le malattie orali costituiscono in Albania un rilevante problema di sanità pubblica, in un contesto di rapida transizione socioeconomica, determinanti comportamentali sfavorevoli e crescente carico di patologie croniche, con ricadute misurabili sugli esiti di salute orale. È stata condotta una valutazione integrata dello stato di salute orale e delle condizioni sistemiche nella popolazione adulta. Obiettivi. Stimare la distribuzione degli indici di salute orale (carie attive, restauri, perdita dentale/missing, denti sani) e valutarne l’associazione con le principali patologie croniche e i fattori di rischio (ipertensione, malattie cardiovascolari, glicemia/diabete, fumo, alcol), con analisi stratificate per età e livello di istruzione. Materiali e metodi. Studio osservazionale trasversale su campione rappresentativo di adulti, stratificato per sesso, età, area di residenza e livello socio-economico. La raccolta dati ha previsto esame clinico, questionari standardizzati e indicatori validati di salute orale; le associazioni tra stato orale e condizioni sistemiche sono state analizzate mediante modelli multivariati con controllo dei principali fattori confondenti. Risultati. Nel campione totale l’ipertensione interessa circa un quarto dei soggetti e supera la metà nelle età ≥60 anni; i principali fattori di rischio comportamentali (fumo e alcol) risultano ampiamente diffusi. Nei profili con ipertensione e malattie cardiovascolari si rilevano esiti orali meno favorevoli, con maggiore perdita dentale e minori quote di denti sani rispetto agli altri gruppi; inoltre, le carie attive presentano picchi in specifici sottogruppi clinici. Emerge un marcato gradiente socio-educativo, con condizioni peggiori ai livelli di istruzione più bassi. Conclusioni. La multimorbidità cronica si associa a peggiori esiti di salute orale, soprattutto nelle classi d’età avanzate e tra i gruppi socialmente svantaggiati. Le evidenze supportano l’adozione di programmi integrati di prevenzione e presa in carico tra odontoiatria e medicina interna, con priorità ai soggetti vulnerabili e agli anziani. Ringraziamenti. Dipartimento di Scienze Odontostomatologiche e Maxillo-Facciali, Sapienza Università di Roma.
Indagine sulla salute orale e la sua correlazione con le malattie sistemiche in un campione rappresentativo della popolazione albanese
HASANAJ, OLSI
2026
Abstract
Introduction. Oral diseases constitute in Albania a significant public health problem, in a context of rapid socioeconomic transition, unfavorable behavioral determinants, and a growing burden of chronic conditions, with measurable repercussions on oral health outcomes. An integrated assessment of oral health status and systemic conditions was conducted in the adult population. Objectives. To estimate the distribution of oral health indices (active caries, restorations, tooth loss/missing, sound teeth) and to evaluate their association with major chronic diseases and risk factors (hypertension, cardiovascular diseases, glycemia/diabetes, smoking, alcohol), with analyses stratified by age and educational level. Materials and methods. Cross-sectional observational study on a representative sample of adults, stratified by sex, age, area of residence, and socioeconomic status. Data collection included clinical examination, standardized questionnaires, and validated oral health indicators; associations between oral status and systemic conditions were analyzed using multivariable models controlling for major confounders. Results. In the overall sample, hypertension affects about one quarter of participants and exceeds one half in ages ≥60 years; maj or behavioral risk factors (smoking and alcohol) are widespread. Profiles with hypertension and cardiovascular diseases show less favorable oral outcomes, with greater tooth loss and lower proportions of sound teeth compared with other groups; moreover, active caries show peaks in specific clinical subgroups. A marked socio-educational gradient emerges, with worse conditions at lower levels of education. Conclusions. Chronic multimorbidity is associated with worse oral health outcomes, especially in older age groups and among socially disadvantaged populations. The evidence supports the adoption of integrated prevention and care programs between dentistry and internal medicine, prioritizing vulnerable individuals and older adults. Acknowledgments. Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Sciences, Sapienza University of Rome.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Tesi_dottorato_Hasanaj.pdf
accesso aperto
Licenza:
Creative Commons
Dimensione
3.54 MB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
3.54 MB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri |
I documenti in UNITESI sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14242/357831
URN:NBN:IT:UNIROMA1-357831