| Literature DB >> 31011577 |
Gabriele Cervino1, Antonella Terranova1, Francesco Briguglio1, Rosa De Stefano2, Fausto Famà3, Cesare D'Amico1, Giulia Amoroso1, Stefania Marino1, Francesca Gorassini1, Roberta Mastroieni1, Cristina Scoglio1, Francesco Catalano1, Floriana Lauritano1, Marco Matarese1, Roberto Lo Giudice1, Enrico Nastro Siniscalchi1, Luca Fiorillo1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: About 5% of the world's population is affected by diabetes; these patients must be further treated during medical and surgical treatments. These patients, due to the glycemic conditions, realize during their life multiorgan changes, in different body districts. Moreover, this condition obliges them to undertake hypoglycemic therapies. Diabetes is a risk factor for many diseases, including those concerning the oral district with immunological implications.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31011577 PMCID: PMC6442307 DOI: 10.1155/2019/5907195
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Most common complications of diabetes [2, 3].
| CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE | SENSORY ORGAN DISEASE | KIDNEY DISEASE | OTHER |
|---|---|---|---|
| (i) Macrovascular disease | (i) Retinopathy | (i) Nephropathy | (i) Erectile dysfunction |
Studies evaluated.
| Author (year) | Type of study | Sample | Parameter evaluated | Treatment | Results | Statistic |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cortelli et al. (2017) [ | RCT, double blinded | 206 for 3 months | Oral Health and Quality of Life (OHQoL), pocket depth, plaque and gingival indices, PCR for bacteria evaluation, Periotron® | Gingival treatment | OHRQoL improved over time, confirming that quality of life could be changed by the treatment of oral diseases such as gingivitis | P<0.05 |
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| Davis et al. (2018) [ | Observational cohort study | 930 (0, 2, 4, 6 years) | Short Form-12 version (SF-12v2), Audit of Diabetes Dependent QoL 19 (ADDQoL) | Blood glucose lowering therapy | These real-life data show that treatment intensification, including insulin initiation, does not impact adversely on patient well-being in community-based type 2 diabetes | P>0.16 |
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| Cinar et al. (2013) [ | Prospective | 186 | Community Periodontal Need Index (CPI) HbA1c (glycated hemoglobin percentage) | Health coaching (HC), Health Education (HE) | The present findings imply that HC has a significantly higher impact on better management of diabetes and oral health when compared to formal HE | P<0.05 |
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| Tzanetakos et al. (2018) [ | RCT | quality-adjusted life-years | Insulin Glargine vs. Liraglutide 1.2mg vs exanatide once weekly | ExQW was estimated to be cost effective relative to IG or Lira1.2mg | / | |
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| Islam et al. (2014) [ | RCT | 216 for 6 months | HbA1c, quality of life | Short message service (SMS) | Mobile phone SMS services have the potential to communicate with | / |
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| Vora et al. (2015) [ | RCT | 170+165 for 24 weeks | Diabetes Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire | Glargine/glulisine once daily or insulin aspart/aspart protamine | In long-standing type 2 diabetes with suboptimal glycaemia despite | |
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| Castro Dos Santos et al. (2016) [ | RCT | 20 at 30, 90, 180 days | Quality of life, public health costs | Antimicrobial photodynamic therapy (aPDT) and ultrasonic periodontal debridement (UPD) | The adjunct application | P>0.05 |
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| Goodson et al. (2017) [ | RCT | 8173 | Salivary glucose concentration, obesity, dental caries, gingivitis | High salivary glucose was associated with dental caries and gingivitis in the study | / | |
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| de Araújo Nobre et al. (2017) [ | Open cohort study | 22009 for 3 years | Periodontitis, dental caries, and peri-implant pathology | Exposure to systemic conditions was prevented | The present study describes an epidemiological approach to the distribution and determinants of the three principal chronical oral diseases | 12.2% less periodontitis and 4.3% less dented caries |
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| Irani et al. (2015) [ | RCT | 61 + 74, 3 to 6 months | OHRQoL, periodontal status, OHIP-49 | Nonsurgical periodontal therapy | T2DM does not impact on overall OHRQoL as measured by OHIP-49 | there were significantly higher OHIP-49 scores (indicating poorer OHRQoL) in patients with gingivitis and periodontitis |
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| Peer et al. (2014) [ | RCT | / | Osteonecrosis of the jaw | Medication | Genetic predisposition for MRONJ, coupled with CYP 450 gene alterations, has been suggested to affect the degradation of medications for DM | / |
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| Fontanari et al. (2014) [ | review | / | Different implant surfaces on diabetic patients | / | It can be concluded that although the benefits of surface modifications present in individuals with diabetes have biological plausibility, there is little evidence of the benefits of these modifications | No significance |
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| Cairo et al. (2001) [ | Review | / | Periodontal disease | / | Diabetes mellitus is an important risk factor for periodontitis | / |
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| Al-Zahrani et al. (2011) [ | Review | / | Halitosis status, HbA1c | / | The results of this study suggest an association between halitosis and increased levels of HbA1c | P=0.03 |
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| Domanico et al. (2015) [ | RCT | 68 | Reactive oxygen species (ROS) | Antioxidant supplementation | Reduction of ROS levels in | P<0.001 |
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| Semba et al. (2014) [ | RCT | 24 for 6 weeks | Peripheral arterial | High or low AGEs diet | A high- or low-AGE diet had no significant | ∖ |
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| Orban et al. (2014) [ | 24 months | Peripheral blood immune cell subsets (CD4, CD8-naive, memory and activated | Costimulation modulator | The findings show that the | / | |
Psychological and neurological issues related to diabetes [1–3].
| NEURO DISEASE | PSYCHOLOGICAL ISSUE |
|---|---|
| (i) Neuropathy | (i) Cognitive decline |
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram.
Figure 2Immunological diabetes aspects and periodontitis.
Figure 3Periodontal disease in diabetic patient, complicated with benign neoformation. This type of lesion, invalidating, also affects the quality of life of the patient, with permission from Dr. L. Fiorillo, 2018.