| Literature DB >> 35883424 |
Pengfei Zhao1, Aimin Xu2, Wai Keung Leung1.
Abstract
Obesity and periodontitis are both common health concerns that have given rise to considerable economic and societal burden worldwide. There are established negative relationships between bone metabolism and obesity, obesity and diabetes mellitus (DM), and DM and periodontitis, to name a few, with osteoporosis being considered a long-term complication of obesity. In the oral cavity, bone metabolic disorders primarily display as increased risks for periodontitis and alveolar bone loss. Obesity-driven alveolar bone loss and mandibular osteoporosis have been observed in animal models without inoculation of periodontopathogens. Clinical reports have also indicated a possible association between obesity and periodontitis. This review systematically summarizes the clinical periodontium changes, including alveolar bone loss in obese individuals. Relevant laboratory-based reports focusing on biological interlinks in obesity-associated bone remodeling via processes like hyperinflammation, immune dysregulation, and microbial dysbiosis, were reviewed. We also discuss the potential mechanism underlying obesity-enhanced alveolar bone loss from both the systemic and periodontal perspectives, focusing on delineating the practical considerations for managing periodontal disease in obese patients.Entities:
Keywords: alveolar bone loss; bone and bones; bone remodeling; obesity; periodontitis
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35883424 PMCID: PMC9313439 DOI: 10.3390/biom12070865
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomolecules ISSN: 2218-273X
Systematic reviews and meta-analyses evaluating the association between obesity and periodontal disease (in chronological order).
| Authors and Year | Aim and Objective | Studies Included and Disease Definition | No. of Participants (Grand Total and Range in Parenthesis) and Outcome of MA | Quality Assessment | Subgroup Analysis (I); | Summary |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chaffee et al. 2010 [ | To compile the evidence concerning relationship between obesity and periodontal disease. | 70/28 studies included for SR/MA. | 70,855 (96–13,665) participants; ORs, or MD of CAL between obese and non-obese groups. | Using a specific scale design by the authors. 13, 7, and 8 studies were rated with high, medium, or low quality of evidence, respectively. | (I) Yes. Based on study characteristics. | A positive association between periodontal disease and obesity. Overall OR: 1.35, 95% CI (1.23, 1.47). |
| Suvan et al. 2011 [ | To systematically review the evidence investigating the association between obesity and periodontitis. | 33/19 studies included for SR/MA. | 39,777 (96–13,665) participants; pooled estimates of ORs. | Newcastle-Ottawa Quality Assessment Scale (N-OQAS) [ | (I) Yes. Based on BMI categories. (II) Not reported. (III) Not reported. | Significant associations between periodontitis and obesity (OR: 1.81, 95% CI (1.42, 2.30]), or overweight (OR: 1.27, 95% CI (1.06, 1.51]), and obese and overweight combined (OR: 2.13, 95% CI (1.40, 3.26]). |
| de Moura-Grec et al. 2014 [ | To systematically review the studies regarding association between overweight/ obesity and periodontitis. | 31/22 studies included for SR/MA. | 69,089 (79–13,665) participants; ORs, MD in BMI between periodontitis and periodontally healthy group. | Not reported. | (I) Not reported. | Obesity and overweight showed an increased odds for periodontitis (OR: 1.3, 95% CI (1.25, 1.35)). |
| Keller et al. 2015 [ | To longitudinally examine the association between obesity and periodontitis. | 13 studies included for SR. | 44,758 (46–36,910) participants; NA. | Not reported. | (I) Not reported. (II) Not reported. (III) Not reported. | Suggests overweight, obesity, weight gain, and increased waist circumference could be considered as risk factors for development of periodontitis. |
| Li et al. 2015 [ | To investigate the association between anthropometric measurements and periodontal diseases in children and adolescents. | 16/5 studies included for SR/MA. | 589(87–164) participants; ORs. | Strengthening the Reporting of Observational studies in epidemiology (STROBE) checklist [ | (I) Yes, based on different periodontal markers. (II) Not reported. | Reported positive association between obesity and presence of subgingival calculus (OR: 3.07, 95% CI (1.10, 8.62]), visible Plaque Index (OR: 4.75; 95% CI (2.42, 9.34]), BOP (OR: 5.41; 95% CI (2.75, 10.63]), and risk of PPD > 4 mm (OR: 14.15; 95% CI (5.10, 39.25]) in children and adolescents. |
| Nascimento et al. 2015 [ | To systematically review the effect of weight gain on incidence of periodontitis. | Both 5 studies included for SR and MA. | 42,158 (224–36,910) participants; RRs. | N-OQAS | (I) Yes, based on obese status. | Results showed overweight (RR: 1.13, 95% CI (1.06, 1.20]) and those participants who became obese (RR: 1.33, 95% CI (1.21, 1.47]) had a significant higher risk to develop periodontitis. |
| Nascimento et al. 2016 [ | To examine the bidirectional association of tooth loss and obesity. | 25/16 studies included for SR/MA. | 42,430 (186–16,416) participants; ORs. | The Critical Appraisal Checklist (Joanna Briggs Institute [ | (I) Yes, based on tooth loss or edentulism. (II) Attempted. Omission of any single study did not alter the findings. (III) Presence of a small-study effect when any tooth loss was considered as an exposure. | Results indicated obese individuals had higher odds of having any tooth loss (OR: 1.49, 95% CI (1.20, 1.86)) or being edentulous (OR: 1.25, 95% CI (1.10, 1.42]), respectively. |
| Martens et al. 2017 [ | To investigate the association between overweight/ obesity and periodontal disease in children and/or adolescents. | 12/7 studies included for SR/MA. | 1983 (87–1204) participants; ORs. | Downs and Black checklist [ | (I) Not reported. | Significant association between periodontal disease and obesity in children (OR: 1.46, 95% CI (1.20, 1.77]). |
| Martinez-Herrera et al. 2017 [ | To systematically review the association between obesity and periodontal disease. | 28 studies included for SR. | 102,221 (91–36,910) participants; NA. | Not reported. | (I) Not reported. | All studies except two articles described an association between obesity and periodontal disease. |
| Khan et al. 2018 [ | To investigate if overweight or obese is risk factor for periodontitis in adolescents and young adults. | 25 studies included for SR. | 51,597 (55–17,660) participants; NA. | N-OQAS | (I) Not reported. (II) Not reported. (III) Not reported. | Suggested evidence available indicating obesity was associated with periodontitis in adolescents and young adults. |
| Foratori-Junior et al. | To generate pooled evidence for the association between excess weight and periodontitis during pregnancy. | Both 11 studies included for SR and MA. | 2152 (50–682) participants; | N-OQAS | (I) Not reported. (II) Not reported. (III) No evidence of publication bias detected. | Positive association between overweight/obesity and periodontitis during pregnancy (RR: 2.21, 95% CI (1.53, 3.17]). |
ABL: alveolar bone loss; BMI: body mass index; BOP: bleeding on probing; CAL: clinical attachment level; CI: confidence interval; CPI: Community Periodontal Index; FMBS: full-mouth bleeding score; GI: Gingival Index; MA: meta-analyses; MD: mean difference; NA: not applicable; N-OQAS: Newcastle-Ottawa Quality Assessment Scale; OR: odds ratio; PI: Plaque Index; PPD: probing pocket depth; RR: relative risk; SR: systematic reviews; WC: waist circumference; WHR: waist/hip ratio.
Figure 1Mechanisms underpinning obesity-related systemic and alveolar bone loss. In obesity, excessive or unhealthily expanded white adipose tissue leads to the dysregulation of adipokines and inflammatory cytokines production. Apart from that, bone marrow adiposity is associated with the adipogenic differentiation of bone marrow stem cells (BMSCs) and the disruption of hematopoiesis, thereby leading to decreased osteoblasts, lymphoid precursors, and increased monocytes differentiation. Worse still, hypermetabolism in obesity can accelerate the senescence of BMSC. As obesity can trigger gut microbial dysbiosis, bone resorption inducing pathobionts, or metabolites from the gut via systemic circulation, this can translocate to bones including the human jaw. Certain gene polymorphisms could exacerbate osteoporosis in obese individuals. Additionally, diet-contained saturated fatty acid may play an independent role in promoting bone loss. These factors are involved in the disruption of bone homeostasis and could have an impact on local periodontal defense, microbial composition, or bone remodeling mechanisms including hyperinflammation, immune dysregulation, periodontal microbial dysbiosis or imbalanced osteoblast, and osteoclast activities, respectively. Red ellipsoid: saturated fatty acids; purple ellipsoid: proinflammatory cytokines; yellow ellipsoid: adipokines; red triangles: pathobionts; blue squares: metabolites. BMSC: bone marrow stem cell; FTO: fat mass and obesity-associated genes; HSC: hematopoietic stem cells; OPG: osteoprotegerin; RANK: receptor activator of nuclear factor-kappa B; RANKL: RANK ligand; ROS: reactive oxygen species; TNF-α: tumor necrosis factor alpha.