| Literature DB >> 36009350 |
Barbara Giordano-Kelhoffer1,2,3,4, Cristina Lorca4,5, Jaume March Llanes6, Alberto Rábano7, Teodoro Del Ser7, Aida Serra5, Xavier Gallart-Palau3,4,8.
Abstract
Imbalances of the oral microbiota and dysbiosis have traditionally been linked to the occurrence of teeth and oral diseases. However, recent findings indicate that this microbiota exerts relevant influence in systemic health. Dysbiosis of the oral microbiota is implicated in the apparition and progression of cardiovascular, neurodegenerative and other major human diseases. In fact, the oral microbiota are the second most diverse and largely populated microbiota of the human body and its relationships with systemic health, although widely explored, they still lack of proper integration. The purpose of this systematic review is thus to widely examine the implications of oral microbiota in oral, cardiovascular and neurodegenerative diseases to offer integrative and up-to-date interpretations. To achieve that aim, we identified a total of 121 studies curated in PUBMED from the time interval January 2003-April 2022, which after careful screening resulted in 79 studies included. The reviewed scientific literature provides plausible vias of implication of dysbiotic oral microbiota in systemic human diseases, and encourages further research to continue elucidating the highly relevant and still poorly understood implications of this niche microbiota in systemic health. PROSPERO Registration Number: CRD42022299692. This systematic review follows relevant PRISMA guidelines.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; cardiovascular disease; caries; dysbiosis; gut microbiota; neurodegeneration; oral microbiota; periodontal disease
Year: 2022 PMID: 36009350 PMCID: PMC9405223 DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines10081803
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomedicines ISSN: 2227-9059
Figure 1Illustrative diagram depicting the diverse microbiota populations that form the niche oral microbiota throughout the different oral cavity regions.
Main factors influencing the compositions of the oral microbiota.
| Age | Host and | Habitat | Biofilm Maturation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Changes in the host and its habits | Genetic factors | Surface 1 | Environment |
| Microevolution | Diet and lifestyle | Oxygen | Probiotics |
| Horizontal transfer of microorganisms | Changes in host defenses | Nutritional status | Oral hygiene |
| Changes in diversity | Broad spectrum antibiotics | Oral hygiene | Microbial interactions |
| Hormonal balance | pH | Immune response | |
| Environment | Cell flaking in the mucosa | Density | |
| Salivary flow and gingival crevicular fluid |
1 Tooth, mucosa, subgingival groove, tongue.
Systemic diseases and pathologies related to dysbiosis of the oral microbiome.
| Autoimmune | Metabolic and | Cancer Diseases | Neurodegenerative |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rheumatoid arthritis [ | Non-alcoholic hepatic steatosis | Colorectal cancer ( | Multiple sclerosis |
| Sjögren syndrome, systemic lupus erythematosus [ | Insulin resistance, diabetes, atherosclerosis [ | Pancreatic cancer ( | Dementia |
| Inflammatory bowel disease [ | Chronic kidney disease | Gastrointestinal cancer [ | Alzheimer’s disease |
| Hypertension, stroke, obesity | Head and neck tumors | ||
| Oral cancer [ |
Figure 2PRISMA flow diagram indicating the steps followed during the scientific literature review process of this work.