Abstract

This register-based study on public sector patients aged 60 years and over assessed annual age-specific volume of and reasons for tooth extractions as well as changes in these across the period 2007-2015. Alongside the rapidly ageing population, the demand for public oral healthcare services is growing. Damaged teeth may induce a long-lasting inflammation burden in old age. Data used the electronic documentation of oral healthcare procedures recorded according to healthcare regulation. The study population consisted of all patients over 60 years of age (n=216 059) who were treated 2007-2015 in public oral health care available to all citizens of Helsinki, Finland. Data for the 9-year time series included reasons for tooth extractions and were aggregated by patient age into 5-year groups. Statistical analyses included rates and proportions, mean values, correlation coefficients and linear regression modelling. Extraction patients (n=48 623) were more likely in the older age groups: 21.8% in the age group 60-64 and 27.5% in the age group 90+. Mean number of tooth extractions among all patients was 0.4 per patient and 1.7 per extraction patient. Among all tooth extractions (n=82 677), main reasons were caries 29.5%, apical periodontitis 19.4%, tooth remnant 19.4% and periodontitis 18.0%. Tooth remnant predominated as extraction reason in the oldest age groups, while apical periodontitis displayed an upward trend by calendar year. Tooth extractions attributable to caries were common in all old-age groups, tooth remnant extractions were most common in older age groups, and apical periodontitis abounded as extraction reason during 2007-2015.

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