| Literature DB >> 27635141 |
Peter de Cock1, Kauko Mäkinen2, Eino Honkala2, Mare Saag3, Elke Kennepohl4, Alex Eapen5.
Abstract
Objective. To provide a comprehensive overview of published evidence on the impact of erythritol, a noncaloric polyol bulk sweetener, on oral health. Methods. A literature review was conducted regarding the potential effects of erythritol on dental plaque (biofilm), dental caries, and periodontal therapy. The efficacy of erythritol on oral health was compared with xylitol and sorbitol. Results. Erythritol effectively decreased weight of dental plaque and adherence of common streptococcal oral bacteria to tooth surfaces, inhibited growth and activity of associated bacteria like S. mutans, decreased expression of bacterial genes involved in sucrose metabolism, reduced the overall number of dental caries, and served as a suitable matrix for subgingival air-polishing to replace traditional root scaling. Conclusions. Important differences were reported in the effect of individual polyols on oral health. The current review provides evidence demonstrating better efficacy of erythritol compared to sorbitol and xylitol to maintain and improve oral health.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27635141 PMCID: PMC5011233 DOI: 10.1155/2016/9868421
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Dent ISSN: 1687-8728
Summary of in vitro and in vivo bacterial (dental plaque) growth inhibition studies with erythritol.
| Study type | Substance tested | Subjects or strain |
| Age (years) | Dose or concentration | Results | Reference |
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| Randomized, double-blinded clinical study | Erythritol or xylitol | Healthy adults and physically or mentally disabled adults | 15 | ~30 | 5.2 g/day, 5x/day for 2 months (tablets) | Xylitol, but not erythritol, showed a statistically significant reduction of dental plaque and saliva and plaque levels of | Mäkinen et al. (2001) |
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| Clinical study | Erythritol/xylitol, sorbitol/xylitol, xylitol, or sorbitol | Mentally disabled adults | 22–26 | ~30 | 5.4 g/day (2.7 g of each polyol), 5x/day for 64 days (tablets) | A significant reduction in plaque and saliva counts of | Mäkinen et al. (2002) |
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| Clinical study | Erythritol, xylitol, or sorbitol | Healthy teenagers | 35-36 | ~17 | 7 g/day, 6x/day (tablets) plus 2x/day (toothpaste) | Significant reduction in the levels of | Mäkinen et al. (2005) |
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| Erythritol, xylitol, or sorbitol |
| — | — | 0.6 M for 5 hours | Erythritol inhibited growth “most effectively” compared with the other sugar alcohols | Mäkinen et al. (2005) |
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| Erythritol or xylitol |
| — | — | 2 or 4% | Erythritol and xylitol, at 4%, significantly reduced the glass surface adhesion Growth inhibition was not associated with the magnitude of the decrease in adherence | Söderling and Hietala-Lenkkeri (2010) |
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| Erythritol or xylitol |
| — | — | 0.5–16% | Compared to xylitol, erythritol in low concentrations (0.5–2%) had a weaker effect on the bacterial growth and acid production of | Yao et al. (2009) |
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| Erythritol or xylitol |
| — | — | 2.35–300 mg/mL | Erythritol (at 150 mg/mL) and xylitol (at 300 mg/mL) inhibited growth | White et al. (2015) |
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| Erythritol or xylitol |
| — | — | 2 or 4% | Erythritol more effective than xylitol in inhibiting growth, adherence, and biofilm formation | Ghezelbash et al. (2012) |
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| Erythritol |
| — | — | 0.5–10% | Erythritol significantly inhibited growth (>78%) and biofilm formation (40.2%) | Saran et al. (2015) |
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| Erythritol, xylitol, or sorbitol |
| — | — | 0.8, 5, or 10% | Most effective reagent to reduce | Hashino et al. (2013) |
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| Erythritol, xylitol, sucrose, or sorbitol |
| — | — | 10% | Erythritol and xylitol significantly inhibited growth at a similar level and decreased the expression of 3 GTF genes and 1 FTF gene compared to sucrose; the gene expression decreases seen with erythritol also were significantly decreased when compared with sorbitol and untreated control; adhesion values and the adhesion inhibition rate were significantly reduced with erythritol and xylitol when compared with sucrose, but not control (water) or sorbitol | Park et al. (2014) |
GTF: glucosyltransferase; FTF: fructosyltransferase.
Figure 1Percent change in fresh dental plaque weight against baseline over a 6-month period in a teenage cohort consuming erythritol-, sorbitol-, or xylitol-containing chewable tablets. Adapted from Mäkinen et al. [10] and Mäkinen (personal communication). p < 0.05 when compared to baseline using a paired t-test. p < 0.001 when compared to baseline using a paired t-test. A p < 0.05 changes from baseline when compared with untreated control, sorbitol, or xylitol.
Figure 2Percent change in salivary and plaque S. mutans score against baseline over a 6-month period in a teenage cohort consuming erythritol-, sorbitol-, or xylitol-containing chewable tablets. Adapted from Mäkinen et al. [10]. p < 0.001 when compared to baseline using a paired t-test.
Figure 3Effect of polyol concentration (mol/L) on growth of S. mutans (strain 267-S) after 5 hours. Adapted from Mäkinen et al. [10] and Mäkinen [36].
Figure 4Effect of polyol concentration (g/100 mL) on growth of S. mutans (strain 267-S) after 5 hours. Adapted from Mäkinen et al. [10] and Mäkinen [36].
Figure 5Mean percent inhibition of streptococci biofilm formation by xylitol and erythritol in a microtiter plate assay. From Ghezelbash et al. [14], p < 0.05 when compared to control using analysis of variance (ANOVA) repeated measures and p < 0.01 when compared to control using analysis of variance (ANOVA) repeated measures (a). From Ghezelbash et al. [14], p < 0.05 when compared to control using analysis of variance (ANOVA) repeated measures and p < 0.01 when compared to control using analysis of variance (ANOVA) repeated measures (b).
Figure 6Growth (a), adhesion (b), and gene expression ((c); gtf and ftf) of S. mutans (strain ATCC 31989) in the presence of 10% sucrose, erythritol, xylitol, or sorbitol (adapted from Park et al. [17]). p < 0.05 when compared to control (water) using analysis of variance (ANOVA) repeated measures (a). SD: standard deviation; overall difference (p < 0.05) based on the Kruskal-Wallis test. A, B, C, DThe same letter indicates no significant difference (p < 0.05) based on Mann-Whitney testing (b). p < 0.05, based on the Kruskal-Wallis test, A, B, C, Dthe same letter indicates no significant difference based on Mann-Whitney testing (c).
Figure 7Percentage of tooth surfaces developing into enamel or dentin caries, percentage of enamel caries developing into dentin caries, and percentage of surfaces with an increase in caries score (increase in caries score is transition from any caries score to increase in score of 1 or more) over a 3-year period in a child cohort consuming erythritol-, sorbitol-, or xylitol-containing candies. From Honkala et al. [37]. p < 0.001 when compared to sorbitol using Fisher's exact test (two-tailed).
Figure 8Percentage of tooth surfaces developing into enamel or dentin caries, percentage of enamel caries developing into dentin caries, and percentage of surfaces with an increase in caries score (increase in caries score is transition from any caries score to increase in score of 1 or more) in a child cohort consuming erythritol-, sorbitol-, or xylitol-containing candies 3 years after intervention. From Falony et al. (manuscript submitted). p < 0.05 when compared to sorbitol using Fisher's exact test (two-tailed). p < 0.001 when compared to sorbitol using Fisher's exact test (two-tailed).
Figure 9Percent change in dental plaque weight against baseline over a 3-year period in a child cohort consuming erythritol-, sorbitol-, or xylitol-containing candies. Adapted from Runnel et al. [40]. p < 0.05 when compared to baseline using the Wilcoxon Signed Rank test with the Bonferroni correction.
Summary of dental caries clinical trials with erythritol.
| Study type | Substance tested | Subjects |
| Age (years) | Dose | Results | Reference |
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| Double-blind randomized controlled prospective intervention trial | Erythritol, xylitol, or sorbitol | School children | 156–165 | ~8-9 | 7.5 g/day, 3x/school day (~200 school days/year) for 3 years | Erythritol group had significantly less tooth surfaces developing into enamel or dentin caries and significantly less enamel caries tooth surfaces developing into dentin caries when compared with sorbitol and xylitol; time of enamel or dentin caries lesions to develop and dentin caries to progress were significantly longer with erythritol | Honkala et al. (2014) |
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| Double-blind randomized controlled prospective intervention trial | Erythritol, xylitol, or sorbitol | School children | 129 | ~14-15 | 7.5 g/day, 3x/school day (~200 school days/year) for 3 years followed by 3 years without any intervention | No significant differences in decayed, missing, and filled teeth and surfaces between the intervention groups were noted However, erythritol group still had reduced percentages of surfaces developing enamel/dentin caries, dentin caries, or subject to dentist intervention compared to other groups | Falony et al. |
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| Salivary and plaque counts of | Erythritol, xylitol, or sorbitol | School children | 156–165 | ~8-9 | 7.5 g/day, 3x/school day (~200 school days/year) for 3 years (tablets) | At years 1 and 3, a significant reduction in the weight of freshly collected dental plaque of the subjects occurred with erythritol | Runnel et al. (2013) |
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| Cluster-randomized, double-blinded clinical trial | Erythritol/maltitol or xylitol/maltitol | Healthy children | 96–101 | ~10 | 4.5 g erythritol + 4.2 g maltitol/day | No evidence of caries reduction; however, final caries diagnoses were made 27 or 39 months after termination of the interventions, and the study subjects lived in a fluoridated area and exhibited low caries activity | Hietala-Lenkkeri et al. (2012) [ |
Summary of periodontal studies on air-polishing with erythritol.
| Study type | Substance tested | Subjects or strain |
| Age (years) | Treatment | Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Randomized, controlled, parallel-group 3-month clinical trial | Erythritol | Adults | 39 | ~55 | Subgingivally treated for 5 seconds with an air-polishing device using erythritol or standard supportive periodontal therapy | No differences in clinical outcomes between subgingival air-polishing with erythritol or traditional scaling except that patients tended to prefer air-polishing with erythritol | Hägi et al. (2013) [ |
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| Randomized, controlled, parallel-group 6-month clinical trial | Erythritol | Adults | 38 | ~55 | Subgingival low abrasive erythritol powder using an air-polishing device or repeated scaling and root planing at study sites | Both treatments produced significant reductions in bleeding on probing and probing pocket depth and increases in clinical attachment level; no statistically significant differences between the treatment groups | Hägi et al. (2015) [ |
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| Randomized clinical trial | Erythritol | Adults | 50 | ~8-9 | Subgingival air-polishing with erythritol containing 0.3% chlorhexidine was compared to ultrasonic debridement at 3-month intervals for up to 12 months | No difference between the treatments with respect to the presence or absence of a probing depth and the frequencies of 6 microorganisms; erythritol-treated sites were less frequently positive for | Müller et al.(2014) [ |
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| Erythritol |
| 2 | — | Air-polishing with 99.7% erythritol/0.3% chlorhexidine versus standard glycine powder | Erythritol/chlorhexidine was significantly more effective than glycine in inhibiting the growth of all 3 strains, reducing the number of surviving cells following air-polishing (15–30% for glycine, 50% for erythritol/chlorhexidine) and reducing the biofilm produced by all 3 strains | Drago et al. (2014) [ |