Assessment of the use of xerogenic medications for chronic medical and dental conditions among adult day health participants.
Słowa kluczowe
Abstrakcyjny
OBJECTIVE
To describe the health conditions, dental problems, and use of xerogenic medications among dental patients in adult day health (ADH) centers.
METHODS
Cross-sectional descriptive study.
METHODS
ADH centers in King County, Washington.
METHODS
ADH clients who were patients of a mobile dental service.
METHODS
Pharmacist-conducted chart reviews and in-person medication reviews with patients.
METHODS
Demographic description, mean numbers of medical and dental problems, medications, xerogenic medications used per subject, and identification of xerogenic medications by therapeutic class.
RESULTS
At five sites, 97 patients were interviewed (average age 73.8 +/- 11.8 years, 61% female); ethnicities included: Asian-American (37.1%), Caucasian (30.9%), Russian (29%), and African-American (3%). Mean numbers of chronic health problems, medications, and xerogenic medications per patient were 5.2 +/- 2.7, 10.9 +/- 4.4, and 3.3 +/- 1.8, respectively. Antidepressants were the most commonly used xerogenic medication, followed by antipsychotics, antiemetics, analgesics, and antihistamines. Among 74 patients who received dental treatment, 33 (44.6%) wore dentures. Among 58 patients with teeth, a mean number of 2.8 dental problems per patient was identified. Dental caries (51.7%) was the most prevalent problem, followed by periodontitis (29.3%), soft tissue lesions (10.3%), gingivitis (5.2%), and candidiasis (3.4%).
CONCLUSIONS
Multiple systemic diseases, use of multiple xerogenic medications, and poor oral health were prevalent among the ADH clients in this study. However, self-reports of dry mouth were unrelated to number of xerogenic medications or oral conditions. Further research is needed to determine the association between self-reported dry mouth, chronic health conditions, use of xerogenic medications, tooth loss, and/or denture use.