Reports on the prevalence of torus mandibularis among dialysis patients have been lim-ited and inconclusive. A wide variety of oral manifestations has been found in patients with hy-perparathyroidism. Furthermore, uremia-related changes in facial bone structures have been de-scribed in the literature. This prospective observational study examined 322 hemodialysis patients treated at the Chang Gung Memorial Hospital from 1 August to 31 December 2016. Two subgroups were identified: patients with torus mandibularis (n = 25) and those without (n = 297). Clinical oral examinations including inspection and palpation were employed. Our study found that most mandibular tori were symmetric (84.0%), nodular (96.0%), less than 2 cm in size (96.0%), and lo-cated in the premolar area (92.0%). Poor oral hygiene was observed among these patients, with 49.7% and 24.5% scoring 3 and 4, respectively, on the Quigley–Hein plaque index. More than half (55.0%) of patients lost their first molars. Multivariate logistic regression analysis revealed that blood phosphate level (odds ratio = 1.494, p = 0.029) and younger age (odds ratio = 0.954, p = 0.009) correlated significantly with torus mandibularis. The prevalence of torus mandibularis in patients receiving hemodialysis in this study was 7.8%. Younger age and a higher blood phosphate level were predictors for torus mandibularis in these patients.
CITATION STYLE
Chang, P. C., Tai, S. Y., Hsu, C. L., Tsai, A. I., Fu, J. F., Wang, I. K., … Yen, T. H. (2021). Torus mandibularis in patients receiving hemodialysis. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(18). https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18189451
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