| Literature DB >> 35978739 |
Smrithi V Varma1, Sheeja Varghese1, Vijayashree J Priyadharsini2, Jayakrishnan Radhakrishnan3, Sajan V Nair4.
Abstract
The role of neurogenic inflammation in various systemic diseases has been well established, but there is a dearth of studies and evidence regarding its role in periodontitis. This study aimed to systematically review the evidence in establishing the role of neurogenic inflammation in chronic periodontitis. Databases such as PubMed, Scopus, and Google Scholar were reviewed. We analyzed studies of any design that compared and evaluated the presence of neuropeptides such as substance P, calcitonin gene-related peptide, neurokinin A, neuropeptide Y, and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide in systemically healthy patients with and without periodontitis. We screened 2,495 articles and abstracts electronically and manually, which yielded 191 articles relevant to our study. Full-text examination of these 191 articles led to the final inclusion of 14 publications. Most studies here confirmed an association between various neuropeptides and periodontitis, but there is a high heterogeneity between the studies, making it necessary to clarify the mechanism between these two. Although most studies included in this review found a positive association between neurogenic inflammation and periodontitis, the evidence is of moderate to low quality.Entities:
Keywords: neurogenic inflammation; neuropeptides; periodontal disease; periodontitis; systematic review
Year: 2022 PMID: 35978739 PMCID: PMC9376007 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.26889
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
A brief outline of the different neuropeptides and their modes of action
SP, substance P; CGRP, calcitonin gene-related peptide; NKA, neurokinin A; NPY, neuropeptide Y; VIP, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide
| Neuropeptide | Origin | Amino Acid Chain | Functions | Location | Mode of Action |
| SP | SP was initially reported in the 1930s by Von Euler and Gaddum (1931) [ | 11-amino-acid peptide [ | Vasodilator activity is a prominent feature of SP. According to Brain and Williams (1988) [ | SP is in peripheral nerves, including enteric neurons and capsaicin-sensitive primary afferent neurons. | Pro-inflammatory |
| CGRP | CGRP was initially discovered in 1982 [ | 37-amino-acid peptide | According to Brain et al., 1985, CGRP has potent vasodilator activity frequently co-localized with SP [ | CGRP is widely distributed throughout the central and peripheral nervous systems. | Anti-inflammatory |
| NKA | NKA was discovered and characterized in 1983 [ | 10-amino-acid peptide | NKA increases vasodilatation, microvascular permeability, and plasma extravasation. | NKA in peripheral nerves, including enteric neurons and capsaicin-sensitive primary afferent neurons. | Pro-inflammatory |
| NPY | NPY was initially isolated from the porcine brain (Tatemoto, 1982) [ | 36-amino-acid peptide | NPY has potent vasoconstrictor activity NPY (Lundberg et al., 1985) [ | NPY is widely distributed throughout the central and peripheral nervous systems. | Pro-inflammatory |
| VIP | VIP was initially isolated from pig intestinal extracts (Said and Mutt, 1970) [ | 28-amino-acid peptide | VIP is an immunomodulatory peptide (Bellinger et al., 1996) [ | VIP is located in the central and peripheral nervous systems. | Anti-inflammatory |
MeSH search terms
MeSH, Medical Subject Heading
| MeSH Terms | |
| Adult Periodontitides | Neuropeptide Receptors |
| adult periodontitis | Neuropeptide Y receptor |
| Adult Periodontitis | Neuropeptide Y |
| Adult | Neuropeptide |
| Aggressive | Parodontoses |
| Calcitonin Gene-Related Peptide | Parodontosis |
| Chronic periodontitides | Periodontal attachment loss |
| chronic periodontitis | Periodontal disease |
| Chronic | Periodontal |
| Circumpubertal Periodontitis | Periodontitides |
| Circumpubertal | Periodontitis |
| Early Onset Periodontitis | Periodontoses |
| Early-Onset Periodontitides | Prepubertal Periodontitis |
| Early-Onset | Prepubertal |
| Juvenile Periodontitides | Refractory periodontitis |
| Juvenile Periodontitis | Vasoactive intestinal peptide |
| Juvenile | - |
Figure 1Structural outline of the search strategy (PRISMA flow diagram)
PRISMA, Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis
Role of neuropeptides in periodontitis case-control studies
ANOVA, analysis of variance; M, male; F, female; CI, confidence interval; NA, not applicable; GCF, gingival crevicular fluid; SP, substance P; CGRP, calcitonin gene-related peptide; NKA, neurokinin A; NPY, neuropeptide Y (NPY)
| Study | Sample Collected | Statistical Method | Outcome Parameters | Sample Size | Groups | Results | Conclusions |
| Lundy et al., 2000 [ | GCF | NA | SP, CGRP, NKA | Group 1: 3F, 1M | Periodontitis | Extensive degradation of CGRP at 1, 10, and 180 minutes; lowest molecular mass (m/z) identified at 180 minutes was 1177.2 m/z | No metabolism of SP, NKA, or CGRP in healthy tissues. The periodontitis group showed a greater breakdown of CGRP than SP and NKA. |
| Group 2: 4F | Healthy | ||||||
| Lundy et al., 2009 [ | GCF | The T-test and Mann-Whitney test | NPY | Group 1: 10F, 10M; | Periodontitis | NPY, 39.8 ng; NPY concentration, 96.4 ng/microL | Significantly elevated NPY in the healthy group. NPY has an anti-inflammatory role. |
| Group 2: 10F, 10M | Control | NPY, 161 ng;, NPY concentration: 645.7 ng/microL | |||||
| Lundy et al., 1999 [ | GCF | Wilcoxon signed-rank test, Friedman two-way ANOVA, Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney | CGRP | Group 1: 9F, 9M | Periodontitis | Subgroup 1, CGRP, 6.3 pg, Concentration, 698.7 pg/microL | Significantly elevated levels of CGRP-IR in periodontally healthy groups compared to gingivitis and periodontitis. |
| Subgroup 2, CGRP, 2.4 pg, Concentration, 19.8 pg/microL | |||||||
| Subgroup 3, CGRP, 0 pg | |||||||
| Group 2: 14F, 5M | Control | CGRP, 8.5 pg, Concentration 433.8 pg/microL | |||||
| Chen et al., 2000 [ | Gingival biopsy | Quantimet 970 | SP, CGRP | Group 1: 15F, 5M | Moderate chronic periodontitis | Mean optical absorption, SP: 0.127856; CGRP: 0.126876 | SP and CGRP exert an inflammatory effect. No intergroup expression changes in response to inflammation. |
| Group 2: 15F, 5M | Healthy controls | Mean optical absorption, SP: 0.117973; CGRP: 0.119763 | |||||
| Sakallioğlu et al., 2008 [ | Gingival biopsy | One-way ANOVA, post hoc Turkey test | SP, CGRP | 27 Subjects | Group 1: Smokers with periodontitis | Mean SP: 35.35±0.79 pg/ml Mean CGRP: 44.32±0.54 pg/ml | Mean SP and CGRP were higher in Group 1 than in Groups 2, 3, and 4 |
| Group 2: Smokers with periodontally healthy teeth | Mean SP: 28.81±0.70 pg/ml, Mean CGRP: 40.74±1.00 pg/ml | ||||||
| Group 3: Nonsmokers with periodontitis | Mean SP: 32.47±1.39 pg/ml, Mean CGRP: 25.66±2.05 pg/ml | ||||||
| Group 4: Nonsmokers with periodontally healthy tooth | Mean SP: 27.91±0.95 pg/ml, Mean CGRP: 40.70±1.21 pg/ml | ||||||
| Leira et al., 2019 [ | Blood samples | Kolmogorov-Smirnov | CGRP | 179 Subjects | Group 1: Chronic migraine with periodontitis | Mean serum CGRP: 19.7±6.5 pg/mL (Beta=0.003; 95% CI: 0.001 to 0.006, p=0.031) | Increased periodontal inflammation is associated with higher circulating levels of CGRP in chronic migraine group. |
| Group 2: Control group | Serum CGRP: 15.3±6.2 pg/ml | ||||||
| Sert et al., 2019 [ | GCF peri-implant sulcular fluid | Shapiro-Wilk, ANOVA, post hoc Tukey, students t-test, paired-sample t and Kruskal-Wallis, Mann-Whitney U and Wilcoxon | SP, CGRP, NKA, NPY | 39 Subjects | Group 1: Healthy group | Mean SP: 31.24±2.83 pg/microL 30s) | A rise in SP and NKA levels and a drop in CGRP and NPY levels in diseased states |
| Mean NKA: 67.59±3.00 pg/microL 30s | |||||||
| Mean CGRP: 48.99±0.78 pg/microL 30s | |||||||
| Mean NPY: 583.11±13.58 pg/microL 30s | |||||||
| Group 2: Periodontitis | Mean SP: 137.57±7.02 pg/microL 30s | ||||||
| Mean NKA: 109.32±4.61 pg/microL 30s | |||||||
| Mean CGRP: 23.92±2.45 pg/microL 30s | |||||||
| Mean NPY: 108.33±18.31 pg/microL 30s |
Role of neuropeptides in periodontitis longitudinal studies
GCF, gingival crevicular fluid; SP, substance P; NKA, neurokinin A; VIP, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide; NKA-LI, neurokinin A-like immunoreactivity; SP-LI, Substance P-like immunoreactivity
| Study | Sample Collected | Statistical Method | Outcome Parameters | Sample Size | Groups | Results | Conclusions |
| Linden et al., 2002 [ | GCF | Wilcoxon signed-rank test, Mann-Whitney | VIP | 20 Subjects | Group 1: Periodontitis | Pretreatment: VIP 302.0 pg; Concentration, 524.3 pg/microL | Increased VIP in periodontitis sites decreased significantly after treatment. |
| Post-treatment: VIP 78.0 pg | |||||||
| Group 2: Healthy | Pretreatment: VIP 115.5 pg; Concentration, 883.8 pg/microL | ||||||
| Post-treatment: VIP 77.8 pg | |||||||
| Pradeep et al., 2009 [ | GCF and Plasma | Kruskal-Wallis | SP | 30 Subjects | Group 1: Healthy | GCF: 6.07± 3.43 pg/mL, Plasma: Not detectable | The mean concentration of SP in GCF and plasma was highest in the periodontitis group and significantly declined after treatment. |
| Group 2: Gingivitis | GCF: 11.42±4.01 pg/mL, Plasma: 38.80± 2.97 pg/mL | ||||||
| Group 3: Periodontitis | GCF: 45.13± 13.99 pg/mL, Plasma: 67.80±11.01 pg/mL | ||||||
| Group 4: Post-treatment group | GCF: 7.58±3.25 pg/mL, Plasma: 39.7±3.83 pg/mL | ||||||
| Lundy et al., 2000 [ | GCF | Wilcoxon signed-rank test | SP, NKA | 8 Subjects | Group 1: Periodontitis pretreatment | SP-LI, 56.3 pg; Concentration, 140.6 pg/microL | Higher SP-LI and NKA-LI levels in GCF before treatment than after treatment. |
| NKA-LI, 30.5 pg; Concentration, 85.4 pg/microL | |||||||
| Group 2: Periodontitis post-treatment | SP-LI, 4.2 pg, Concentration, 24.2 pg/microL | ||||||
| NKA-LI, 10.6 pg, Concentration, 61.6 pg/microL |
Role of neuropeptides in periodontitis in in-vitro studies
ANOVA, analysis of variance; SP, substance P; CGRP, calcitonin gene-related peptide; NPY, neuropeptide Y; VIP, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide
| Study | Sample Collected | Statistical Method | Outcome Parameters | Sample Size | Groups | Conclusions |
| Luthman et al., 1989 [ | Gingival biopsy | NA | SP, CGRP VIP, NPY | 33 Subjects | Group 1: Periodontitis | SP, CGRP, NPY, and VIP immune reactivity in periodontitis gingiva but no discernable variations in distribution when compared to clinically healthy sites. |
| Group 2: Healthy | ||||||
| Bartold et al., 1994 [ | Gingival biopsy | ANOVA | SP | 6 subjects | Group 1: Healthy human gingival tissues | SP in the connective tissue between collagenous elements of healthy tissue. SP levels were higher around the blood vessels and inflammatory cell infiltrate of periodontally inflamed tissues. |
| Group 2: Inflamed human gingival tissues |
Role of neuropeptides in periodontitis in cross-sectional and split-mouth studies
ANOVA, analysis of variance; SP, substance P; GCF, gingival crevicular fluid; NKA, neurokinin A; NKA-LI, neurokinin A-like immunoreactivity; PPD, periodontal probing depth
| Study | Sample Collected | Statistical Method | Outcome Parameters | Sample Size | Groups | Results | Conclusions |
| Hanioka et al., 2000 [ | GCF | Spearman rank correlation coefficient | SP | 48 Subjects | Periodontitis | Significant correlation between SP and PPD (r=0.637, p≤0.001) | An important determinant in GCF is SP which has a significant correlation to PPD. |
| Weak correlation between SP and gingival (r=0.177; p=0.23) | |||||||
| Weak correlation between SP and plaque index (r=0.008,p=0.96) | |||||||
| Linden GJ et al., 1997 [ | GCF | Wilcoxon signed-rank test, Friedman 2-way ANOVA, Wilcoxon Mann-Whitney | SP, NKA | 40 Subjects | Group 1: Periodontitis | Subgroup 1: SP-LI, 10.0 pg; Concentration: 279.6 pg/microL | Greater levels of SPA-LI and NKA-LI A in the periodontitis group than in the control group |
| Subgroup 2: SP-LI, 21.1 pg; Concentration: 61.7 pg/microL | |||||||
| Subgroup 3: SP-LI, 42.4 pg; Concentration: 43 pg/microL | |||||||
| Group 2: Healthy group | SP-LI: 2.0 pg; Concentration: 61.5 pg/microL |