A Savolainen

University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Province of Southern Finland, Finland

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Publications (55)188.42 Total impact

  • Article: Self-reported bruxism mirrors anxiety and stress in adults.
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    ABSTRACT: Objectives: The aims were to analyze whether the levels of self-reported bruxism and anxiety associate among otherwise healthy subjects, and to investigate the independent effects of anxiety and stress experience on the probability of self-reported bruxism. Study Design: As part of a study on irregular shift work, a questionnaire was mailed to all employees of the Finnish Broadcasting Company with irregular shift work (number of subjects: n=750) and to an equal number of randomly selected employees in the same company with regular eight-hour daytime work. Results: The response rates were 82.3% (56.6 % men) and 34.3 % (46.7 % men), respectively. Among the 874 respondents, those aware of more frequent bruxism reported significantly more severe anxiety (p<0.001). Adjusted by age and gender, frequent bruxers were more than two times more likely to report severe stress (odds ratio 2.5; 95% confidence interval 1.5-4.2) and anxiety (odds ratio 2.2; 95% confidence interval 1.3-3.6) than non-or-mild bruxers. Conclusions: Present findings suggest that self-reported bruxism and psychological states such as anxiety or stress may be related in working age subjects.
    Medicina oral, patologia oral y cirugia bucal 08/2012;
  • Article: Autoimmune diseases in children with juvenile idiopathic arthritis.
    Scandinavian journal of rheumatology 01/2010; 39(5):435-6. · 2.51 Impact Factor
  • Article: Bruxism and sleep efficiency measured at home with wireless devices.
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    ABSTRACT: The present study comprised 101 (48 men) employees of the Finnish Broadcasting Company with or without irregular shift work, but all with a work week of five shifts in a row followed by 2 days off. The mean age of the subjects was 41.0 years (SD = 9.9). The BiteStrip, a single-use disposable EMG device was used for one night during the work week to detect sleep bruxism. The Actiwatch Plus actigraph was worn on the non-dominant wrist for the entire week to evaluate sleep. Total sleep time and fragmentation index, the latter as a measure of sleep efficiency was calculated for the present study. The BiteStrip scores among the participants were: 0- no bruxism: 52.2% (according to the manufacturer, comparable to a sleep laboratory bruxism count of up to 39 over 5 h), 1- mild: 29.3% (40-74 counts), 2- moderate: 12.0%: (75-124 counts) and 3- severe: 6.5% (>125 counts). Severe bruxers slept less during the work week than non-bruxers (P = 0.009), but severe bruxers slept slightly more than non-bruxers during days off. The group means of the sleep fragmentation index decreased from start towards the middle of the work week and increased during days off (P = 0.016). The levels of the fragmentation indices were consistently higher in accordance with bruxism severity (P = 0.013). It was concluded that bruxism has a coherent relationship with sleep efficiency and it can be detected at home with a low cost device.
    Journal of Oral Rehabilitation 05/2008; 35(8):567-71. · 1.53 Impact Factor
  • Article: Finnish case-control and family studies support PTPN22 R620W polymorphism as a risk factor in rheumatoid arthritis, but suggest only minimal or no effect in juvenile idiopathic arthritis.
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    ABSTRACT: Several studies have identified the PTPN22 allelic variant 1858 C/T that encodes the R620W amino-acid change as a putative susceptibility factor in autoimmune diseases. The current study was undertaken to examine a large cohort of Finnish rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) subjects using both population control and, importantly, family-based association methods. The latter is particularly important when, as is the case for the 1858 C/T polymorphism, the frequency of the variant allele (T) differs in both major ancestral populations and in subpopulations. The analysis of rheumatoid factor-positive 1030 RA probands from Finland provides strong support for association of this variant in both population studies (allele specific odds ratio (OR)=1.47, 95% confidence interval (CI)=1.27-1.70, P=3 x 10(-7)) and in family studies (P<10(-6)). In contrast, no allelic association was seen with JIA (230 probands) and only weak evidence for a genotypic effect of 1858T homozygotes was observed in this population.
    Genes and Immunity 12/2005; 6(8):720-2. · 3.87 Impact Factor
  • Article: HLA-DRB1, TAP2/TAP1, and HLA-DPB1 haplotypes in Finnish juvenile idiopathic arthritis: more complexity within the MHC.
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    ABSTRACT: This study further defines genetic susceptibility to JIA in the region centromeric to HLA-DRB1. DNA from 234 Finnish JIA nuclear families and 639 elderly Finnish control individuals was genotyped for five functional SNPs within the TAP2 and TAP1 loci ( approximately 200 kb centromeric of HLA-DRB1). Subsets of the controls (186) and patients (145) that had been previously typed for HLA-DRB1 were also genotyped by sequence for the HLA-DPB1 locus. Case/control and transmission disequilibrium test (TDT) methods revealed an association with the DPB1(*)030101 allele for JIA (OR 2.3, 95% CI 1.5-3.5). Notably, a detailed haplotypic analysis of the TAP2/TAP1 loci and their interaction with the HLA-DPB1(*)030101 and DRB1(*)08 and (*)11 alleles showed a variety of over-represented and under-represented TAP2/TAP1 haplotypes not evident in the single marker analysis. The strongest effect was observed in the polyarticular RF negative JIA subgroup for the 2-2-1-2-1 TAP2/TAP1 haplotype (TAP2B and TAP1A alleles) which showed an independent effect from both DRB1(*)08 and (*)11 (P<0.000003) and DPB1(*)030101 (P=0.02). We have provided evidence that the extended haplotypes (including HLA-DRB1, TAP2/TAP1, and HLA-DPB1) of pauciarticular and polyarticular RF negative disease are distinct. This observation may have implications for functional etiological differences between the pauciarticular and polyarticular JIA patients.
    Genes and Immunity 12/2004; 5(7):562-71. · 3.87 Impact Factor
  • Article: Perceived stress, pain and work performance among non-patient working personnel with clinical signs of temporomandibular or neck pain.
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    ABSTRACT: The aim of the present study was to assess the associations between different types of perceived stress, pain and work performance among non-patients with clinical signs of muscle pain in the head/neck region. One-fifth (n = 241) of the 1339 media employees who had participated in a previous survey (Ahlberg J. et al., J Psychosom Res 2002; 53: 1077-1081) were randomly selected for standardized clinical examinations. Altogether 49% (n = 118) of these subjects had clinical signs of temporomandibular and/or neck muscle pain and were enrolled in the present study. The mean age of the study sample was 46.9 years (s.d. 6.6) and the female to male distribution 2:1. Of the 118 employees 46.5% reported that the pain problem interfered with their ability to work. Perceived ability to work was not significantly associated with age, gender or work positions. According to logistic regression, reduced work performance was significantly positively associated with continuous pain [odds ratio (OR) 4.38; 95% CI 1.21-15.7], level of perceived pain severity (OR 1.30; 95% CI 1.04-1.63), and health stress (OR 2.08; 95% CI 1.22-3.54). The results of this study indicated an association between specific self-reported stress regarding health and work issues, pain and work performance. From a preventive perspective this indicates a need for increased awareness about these associations on not only individual level but also at the organizational level and in health care.
    Journal of Oral Rehabilitation 09/2004; 31(8):733-7. · 1.53 Impact Factor
  • Article: Reported bruxism and biopsychosocial symptoms: a longitudinal study.
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    ABSTRACT: In this follow-up study of 30-50-year-old employees (n = 211) of the Finnish Broadcasting Company (YLE), respondents completed questionnaires in both 1999 and 2000 containing items on demographic data, tobacco use, levels of perceived bruxism, affective disturbance, sleep disturbance, somatic symptoms, pain symptoms and temporomandibular disorder (TMD) symptoms. Bruxism was significantly more prevalent among smokers (P = 0.005). Age, marital status, and gender were not associated with bruxism. Subjects in the frequent bruxism group (n = 74) reported the TMD-related painless symptoms, affective disturbance and early insomnia significantly more often than average. In the multivariate analyses, clustered pain symptoms (P = 0.001), TMD-related painless symptoms (P = 0.004) and smoking (P = 0.012) were significantly positively associated with frequent bruxism, when the independent effects of age and gender were controlled for. It was concluded that successful management of TMD necessitates smoking cessation, as tobacco use may both amplify the patient's pain response and provoke bruxism. Psychosocial factors and perceived stress should not be ignored, however.
    Community Dentistry And Oral Epidemiology 09/2004; 32(4):307-11. · 1.89 Impact Factor
  • Article: Analysis of MHC region genetics in Finnish patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis: evidence for different locus-specific effects in polyarticular vs pauciarticular subsets and a shared DRB1 epitope.
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    ABSTRACT: This study used Finnish juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) probands with pauciarticular and rheumatoid factor (RF) negative polyarticular subtypes of JIA to further define the genetic susceptibility to JIA. We examined 16 markers spanning an 18 cM region of chromosome 6 encompassing the MHC and surrounding genomic region in a set of 235 Finnish JIA nuclear families and 639 Finnish control individuals. Analysis by case/control association and transmission disequilibrium test (TDT) methods each demonstrated strong evidence for a susceptibility locus near the D6S2447 microsatellite (P<10(-6) for both methods) that is flanked by DQB1 and DRB1. Analysis of the DRB1 locus suggested that DRB1*0801 and DRB1*1101 rather than DQA1 or other HLA alleles may be responsible for conferring susceptibility to disease. These findings are consistent with the most compelling results of previous reports on HLA associations and suggest a JIA DRB1 shared epitope encompassing critical amino-acid residues in the third hypervariable region of this molecule. Most importantly, in pauciarticular patients, the strong association does not extend to proximal markers as it does in polyarticular patients (P<0.00001). Analysis strongly suggests that the difference is because of additional JIA susceptibility loci within the MHC being present in polyarticular RF negative patients.
    Genes and Immunity 08/2003; 4(5):326-35. · 3.87 Impact Factor
  • Article: Spin probe studies on molecular motions of 2,6‐disubstituted poly(phenylene oxides) near glass transition
    A. Savolainen, P. Törmälä
    Journal of Polymer Science Polymer Physics Edition 03/2003; 12(6):1251 - 1254.
  • Article: Distinct biopsychosocial profiles emerge among nonpatients.
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    ABSTRACT: The cross-sectional study comprised 30- to 55-year-old permanent employees (N=1784) of the Finnish Broadcasting Company (YLE). The participants (N=1339, response rate 75%) completed standardised questionnaires covering demographic items, physical health, work performance, stress symptoms, pain and musculoskeletal symptoms, and overall biopsychosocial health. Physical symptoms (present often or continually) were reported by 15%, psychosomatic by 19% and psychosocial by 14%. The intercorrelations between 73 biopsychosocial variables revealed nine factors explaining 54.5% of variance for intrapersonal profiles and four factors explaining 59.2% of variance for interpersonal profiles. The Cronbach alphas for reliability ranged from.76 to.83. Three distinct biopsychosocial cluster profiles were found: Cluster 1 (n=290, 27%) loaded positively with the somatic and psychosocial variables, Cluster 2 (n=558, 51%) loaded negatively with the various biopsychosocial symptoms, and Cluster 3 (n=235, 22%) loaded positively with anxiety. Discriminant function analysis confirmed that this cluster solution correctly classified 95.2% of the subjects in a nonpatient multiprofessional population, which supports the biopsychosocial approach also in work life issues.
    Journal of Psychosomatic Research 01/2003; 53(6):1077-81. · 3.30 Impact Factor
  • Article: Reported bruxism and stress experience.
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    ABSTRACT: The aim of the study was to analyze whether perceived bruxism was associated with stress experience, age, gender, work role, and occupational health care use among a nonpatient multiprofessional population. Altogether, 1784 (age 30-55 years) employees of the Finnish Broadcasting Company were mailed a self-administered questionnaire covering demographics, perceived bruxism, total stress experience and the use of health care services provided by the company. The response rate was 75% (n = 1339, 51% men) and mean age was 46 years (SD = 6) in both genders. There were no significant differences in demographic status by age and gender. Bruxism and stress experiences did not significantly vary with regard to category of work, but both were significantly more frequent among women (P < 0.05). In all work categories frequent bruxers reported more stress, and the perceptions were significantly differently polarized between the groups (P < 0.001). According to logistic regression, frequent bruxism was significantly positively associated with severe stress experience (Odds ratio = 5.00; 95% CI = 2.84-8.82) and female gender (Odds ratio = 2.26; 95% CI = 1.43-3.55). Frequent bruxism was also significantly positively associated with the numbers of occupational health care and dental visits (P < 0.01), and slightly negatively associated with increasing age and work in administration (P < 0.05). It was concluded that bruxism may reveal ongoing stress in normal work life.
    Community Dentistry And Oral Epidemiology 01/2003; 30(6):405-8. · 1.89 Impact Factor
  • Article: The cervical spine in mutilant juvenile chronic arthritis.
    K Laiho, M Kauppi, A Savolainen, E A Belt
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    ABSTRACT: To describe inflammatory cervical spine disorders in juvenile chronic arthritis (JCA) patients with arthritis mutilans (AM) hand deformity. The series consisted of 18 patients affected by AM hand deformity who fulfilled the European League of Associations for Rheumatology criteria for JCA. The patient records and the most recent cervical spine radiographs were evaluated for subluxations, atlantoaxial impaction (AAI) and apophyseal joint ankylosis. Seventeen (94%) patients had subluxation, AAI or apophyseal joint ankylosis in the cervical spine. Apophyseal joint ankylosis was noted in 12 (67%) patients and AAI in 10 (56%). Anterior atlantoaxial subluxation was detected in five (28%) patients. Almost all of the JCA patients with AM hand deformity evinced some inflammatory changes in the cervical spine. Apophyseal joint ankylosis, AAI and multiplicity of changes in cervical spine may be considered characteristic in this subset of JCA patients. Patients with JCA and AM hand deformity tend to have severe changes also in the cervical spine.
    Joint Bone Spine 11/2001; 68(5):425-9. · 2.27 Impact Factor
  • Article: Multiple stress fractures in a young girl with chronic idiopathic arthritis. Extended case report.
    H Mäenpää, A Savolainen, M U Lehto, E A Belt
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    ABSTRACT: The occurrence of stress fractures in patients with long-standing rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is widely known. Osteoporosis, corticosteroid therapy, joint stiffness, contracture, angular deformity of the joint and failed joint reconstruction--all together or separately--predispose to bone loss and stress fractures. In the present report we describe the history of a girl with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) having multiple stress fractures. The relationship between corticosteroid therapy and immobilisation in the treatment of fractures is discussed.
    Joint Bone Spine 11/2001; 68(5):438-42. · 2.27 Impact Factor
  • Article: Changes in the incidence of juvenile rheumatoid arthritis in Finland.
    O Kaipiainen-Seppänen, A Savolainen
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    ABSTRACT: To study trends in the incidence of juvenile rheumatoid arthritis (JRA). The study covered subjects who were entitled under the nation-wide sickness insurance scheme to receive specially reimbursed medication for juvenile rheumatic diseases in 11 of 21 central hospital districts in Finland (the base population comprised about 445,000 children <16 yr of age) in 1995. Data from the years 1980, 1985 and 1990 were compared with data from 1995 concerning the central part of the area, which had been included in a previous study by us. A total of 87 incident cases (58 girls and 29 boys) satisfied criteria for JRA in 1995 in the study area. The incidence of JRA was 19.5 per 100 000 [95% confidence interval (CI) 15.6-24.1] of the population <16 yr of age for the whole area. It was 22.7 per 100,000 (95% CI 17.3-29.2) for the area that had been covered by the earlier study (five districts) and 14.9 per 100,000 (95% CI 9.8-21.7) for the new area (six additional districts). The incidence of JRA was significantly higher than in the earlier years (1980, 1985 and 1990) in the same district (trend, P=0.024). The highest incidence, 60.3 per 100,000 (95% CI 35.8-95.4), was noted in 1995 among girls in the age group 10-15 yr in the southernmost part of the study area. There was both temporal and regional variation in the incidence of JRA. Results of the present study suggest that environmental factors may influence the frequency of JRA.
    Rheumatology 08/2001; 40(8):928-32. · 4.06 Impact Factor
  • Article: Uveitis in sibling pairs with juvenile idiopathic arthritis.
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    ABSTRACT: To ascertain the occurrence and characteristics of uveitis in sibling pairs affected with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA). The sibling series comprised 80 JIA patients from 37 families with two or three JIA children, seen at the paediatric department of the Rheumatism Foundation Hospital in Heinola, Finland. An ophthalmologist examined the children for uveitis two to four times a year and the course of the condition was recorded during the follow-up. Uveitis was diagnosed in 21 of the 80 patients (26%). Three pairs (3.4 pairs expected) were concordant for the presence of asymptomatic uveitis. Two patients with enthesitis-related arthritis had acute unilateral uveitis. Among the remaining cases, uveitis was chronic and continuously active at the end of follow-up in 13 instances, but in spite of this only one patient had impaired vision. HLA allele B27 occurred more frequently in patients with uveitis than in those without uveitis (52 vs 30%, P=0.073) and all six subjects in the pairs concordant for chronic uveitis carried this allele. The observed concordance rate for uveitis did not differ from that expected. Although the uveitis was chronic in most instances, its course was usually mild.
    Rheumatology 03/2001; 40(2):221-4. · 4.06 Impact Factor
  • Source
    Article: Magnitude of the genetic component in juvenile idiopathic arthritis.
    Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases 01/2001; 59(12):1001. · 8.73 Impact Factor
  • Article: Trends in mortality of patients with rheumatoid arthritis.
    The Journal of Rheumatology 10/2000; 27(9):2283-4. · 3.69 Impact Factor
  • Article: Type of onset of juvenile idiopathic arthritis in monozygotic twins can be phenotypically different.
    The Journal of Rheumatology 10/2000; 27(9):2289-90. · 3.69 Impact Factor
  • Article: Favourable outcome in 135 children with juvenile systemic sclerosis: results of a multi-national survey.
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    ABSTRACT: To increase the current knowledge of the outcome of juvenile systemic sclerosis (jSSc), which is currently limited. In order to investigate the patient outcome and prognostic factors, starting October 1994, we distributed questionnaires to 324 paediatric rheumatology centres. Until 15 May 1998 responses from 46 centres were received, 34 of which returned completed questionnaires on a total of 135 patients. One hundred and twenty-two of the 135 patients were Caucasian, 100 were female. The mean age at disease onset was 8.8 yr (S.D. +/- 3.3 yr). The mean disease duration at the last follow-up was 5 yr(S.D. +/- 3.3 yr). At the last follow-up the disease was still active and required medication in 82 patients, 36 had inactive disease on medication, and 16 were in remission. Ninety per cent of the living patients were fully active in daily life at the last follow-up. Eight of the 135 patients had died. These patients had a median age at onset of the disease of 10.5 yr (range 6.7-15.8 yr). The median disease duration until death was 2 yr (range 1-8 yr). The causes of death were heart failure (five), renal failure (one), sepsis (one) and in one case the cause was not defined. The 1 yr survival rate was 99%, the 2 yr was 97% and the 4 yr was 95%. At a mean follow-up of 5 yr, the current results show a favourable outcome in most patients with childhood onset jSSc and a significantly better survival than in the adult SSc patients.
    Rheumatology 06/2000; 39(5):556-9. · 4.06 Impact Factor
  • Article: Weight-bearing physical activity, calcium intake, systemic glucocorticoids, chronic inflammation, and body constitution as determinants of lumbar and femoral bone mineral in juvenile chronic arthritis.
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    ABSTRACT: The associations between the lumbar and femoral bone mineral and several body constitutional, lifestyle, and disease related variables were studied in 111 children with juvenile chronic arthritis (JCA) by factor and multiple linear regression analyses. In addition to the measurement of bone mineral density (BMD), bone width and bone mineral volumetric density (BMDvol) were determined by dual-x-ray absorptiometry (DXA). Factor analysis of 13 explanatory variables yielded six non-correlating factors, named as body size, physical activity, calcium intake, glucocorticoids, disease duration, and disease activity. These six factors were used as new variables to explain BMD, BMDvol, and bone width by multiple linear regression analyses. These showed body size, physical activity, and calcium intake as significant positive and disease activity and glucocorticoids as significant negative determinants of BMD in JCA. The analyses revealed also considerable differences in the relationships between factors and BM Dvol or bone width.
    Scandinavian Journal of Rheumatology 02/1999; 28(1):19-26. · 2.47 Impact Factor

Institutions

  • 2003–2012
    • University of Helsinki
      • Institute of Dentistry
      Helsinki, Province of Southern Finland, Finland
  • 1993–2004
    • Helsinki University Central Hospital
      Helsinki, Province of Southern Finland, Finland
    • University of Jyväskylä
      Jyväskylä, Western Finland, Finland
    • Finnish Institute of Occupational Health
      Helsinki, Province of Southern Finland, Finland
  • 2001
    • Kuopion Yliopistollinen Sairaala
      • Department of Medicine
      Kuopio, Province of Eastern Finland, Finland