| Literature DB >> 36245042 |
Jan Kowalski1, Maciej Nowak2, Bartłomiej Górski2, Renata Górska2.
Abstract
Recent decades have shed a new light on the pathomechanism of periodontal inflammation. While classic periodontology concentrates on biofilm control, oral hygiene improvement, professional tooth cleaning and surgical correction of damaged periodontal tissues, new aspects of the destruction mechanisms are being raised. Among them, the greatest attention is paid to the influence of host response on the clinical manifestations of the disease. Numerous studies have proved that the shift from gingivitis to periodontitis is not a simple progress of the disease, but an event occurring only in susceptible individuals. Susceptibility may result from appearance of local factors facilitating biofilm accumulation and/or maturation, or from systemic features, among which over-reaction and prolonged agitation of non-specific component of inflammatory response is crucial. The present paper summarizes the association between periodontology and immunology and updates the knowledge accrued mostly in the recent years. After a brief explanation of advances in understanding of the disease aetiology, the most studied and potentially viable immunological markers of periodontal disease are presented. Possible new therapeutic strategies, exploiting knowledge about the nature of host response-immunomodulation and reduction of chronic oxidative stress-are also presented.Entities:
Keywords: Biomarkers; Immunology; Immunomodulation; Oxidative stress; Periodontal diseases
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36245042 PMCID: PMC9573852 DOI: 10.1007/s00005-022-00662-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Immunol Ther Exp (Warsz) ISSN: 0004-069X Impact factor: 3.831
Chosen biomarkers for periodontal inflammation, their main function, measured clinical periodontal parameters and the referring articles mentioned in the text
| Abbreviation | Full name | Main function | Results | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MMP-8 | Matrix metalloproteinase-8 | Degradation of the type I, II and III collagen fibers in the connective tissue | SMD for MMP 1.195 (95% CI 0.72, 1.67) | Meta-analysis Zhang et al. ( | |
| SMD for MMP 35.90 (95% CI − 31.52, 103.33) | Meta-analysis Kim and Kim ( | ||||
| N/A (61 studies reviewed) | Systematic review Al-Majid et al. ( | ||||
| N/A (6 studies reviewed) | Systematic review de Morais et al. ( | ||||
| MMP-9 | Matrix metalloproteinase-9 | Degradation of the type IV and V collagen fibers in the connective tissue | Salivary levels in ng/mL 283.5 vs 52.6 (periodontitis vs health), | Cross-sectional study Ebersole et al. ( | |
| IL-1 | Interleukin 1 | Stimulation of the non-specific component of the inflammatory response, induced by the Nfkappaβ | Salivary levels in ng/ml 370.7 vs 191.9 (periodontitis vs health), | Cross-sectional study Kim et al. ( | |
| Mean difference (diabetics with periodontitis vs nondiabetics with periodontitis) 0.90 (95% CI 0.39, 1.41) | Meta-analysis Atieh et al. ( | ||||
| IL-1 raised in GCF of periodontal patients (SMD 1.43; 95% CI 0.93, 1.92) | Meta-analysis Stadler et al. ( | ||||
| IL-1β raised in peri-implant mucositis (SMD 1.94; 95% CI 0.87, 3.35) and peri-implantitis (SMD 2.21; 95% CI 1.32, 3.11) | Meta-analysis Ghassib et al. ( | ||||
| IL-1β mRNA raised in gingival tissue (mean difference 3.62; 95%CI: 3.43, 3.81), IL-1β raised in GCF (mean difference 95.94; 95% CI 81.96, 109.92) | Meta-analysis Caldeira et al. ( | ||||
| IL-6 | Interleukin 6 | Promotion of the osteoclasts’ formation | Salivary levels in ng/mL 90.9 vs 7.2 (periodontitis vs health), | Cross-sectional study Ebersole et al. ( | |
| No significant difference for diabetics with periodontitis vs nondiabetics with periodontitis: 0.70 (95% CI − 0.70, 1.41) | Meta-analysis Atieh et al. ( | ||||
| IL-6 raised in GCF of periodontal patients (SMD 1.64; 95% CI 0.66, 2.63) | Meta-analysis Stadler et al. ( | ||||
| IL-6 raised in peri-implant mucositis (SMD 1.17; 95% CI 0.16, 3.19) and peri-implantitis (SMD 1.72; 95% CI 0.56, 2.87) | Meta-analysis Ghassib et al. ( | ||||
| IL-6 mRNA raised in gingival tissue (mean difference 5.42; 95% CI 5.15, 5.68), IL-6 raised in GCF (mean difference 3.63; 95% CI 3.03, 4.23) | Meta-analysis Caldeira et al. ( | ||||
| TNF-α | Tumor necrosis factor alpha | Stimulation of the non-specific component of the inflammatory response, strong chemoattractant | Salivary levels in ng/mL 35.6 vs 3.3 (periodontitis vs health), | Cross-sectional study Ebersole et al. ( | |
| No significant difference for diabetics with periodontitis vs nondiabetics with periodontitis: 0.33 (95% CI − 0.19, 0.86) | Meta-analysis Atieh et al. ( | ||||
| TNF-α raised in peri-implant mucositis (SMD 3.91; 95% CI 1.13, 6.70) and peri-implantitis (SMD 3.78; 95% CI 1.67, 5.89) | Meta-analysis Ghassib et al. ( | ||||
| PGE2 | Prostaglandin E2 | Stimulation of osteoclast activity | Salivary levels in ng/mL 5.4 vs 1.9 (periodontitis vs health), | Cross-sectional study Ebersole et al. ( | |
| RANKL | Receptor Activator of Nuclear factor Kappa-B Ligand | Stimulation of osteoclast activity | Salivary levels in ng/mL 226.1 vs 180 (periodontitis vs health), | Cross-sectional study Ebersole et al. ( | |
| N/A (11 studies reviewed) | Systematic review Belibasakis and Bostanci ( | ||||
| Elevation of RANKL in GCF in periodontitis vs health (mean difference 0.32; 95% CI 0.20, 0.43) | Meta-analysis Caldeira et al. ( | ||||
| OPG | Osteoprotegerin | Blocker of RANK | Levels in pg/ml measured at periodontitis and healthy sites 95.5 vs 56.5, respectively, | Longitudinal study Lopez Roldan et al. ( | |
| N/A (11 studies reviewed) | Systematic review Belibasakis and Bostanci ( | ||||
| MDA | Malondialdehyde | Product of the peroxidation of polyunsaturated fatty acids | Levels in pg/ml measured at periodontitis and healthy sites 3.1 vs 7.0, respectively, | Longitudinal study Lopez Roldan et al. ( | |
| SMD for salivary MDA 1.74 (95% CI), SMD for MDA in GCF 2.86 (95% CI) | Meta-analysis Chen et al. ( | ||||
SMD standardized mean difference, CI confidence interval, GCF gingival crevicular fluid
Chosen immunomodulators utilized in periodontal therapy, mechanism of action, measured clinical periodontal parameters and the referring articles mentioned in the text
| Name | Action | Results | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Doxycycline | Inhibition of MMP-8 and MMP-9 in subantimicrobial dose (20 mg) | MD for use of doxycycline 0.88 mm for CAL (95% CI), 0.64 mm for PD (95% CI) | Meta-analysis Sgolastra et al. ( |
| MD for use of doxycycline and PD reduction 0.30 mm for moderate pockets (95% CI) and 0.62 mm for deep pockets (95% CI) | Meta-analysis Donos et al. ( | ||
| No difference in CAL, PD or BoP between SDD and PDT | Meta-analysis Trombelli et al. ( | ||
| NSAIDs | Inhibition of prostaglandins | PD for individuals taking NSAIDs vs controls: 1.68 vs 1.95 mms, | Cross-sectional study Waite et al. ( |
| 1% flurbiprofren toothpaste twice daily vs placebo: significant greater proportion of sites with bone gain (8.0 vs 3.3%), no differences in sites with bone loss or no change | Randomized-controlled trial Heasman et al. ( | ||
| 0.3% acetylsalicylic acid topically: significant reduction of PD (median 0.26 mm) compared to controls. No significant difference for BoP | Randomized -controlled trial Flemmig et al. ( | ||
| Celecoxib 200 mg daily: significant reduction of PD and CAL in moderate and deep pockets, compared to controls (3.84 vs 2.06 and 3.74 vs 1.43 mms, respectively) | Randomized -controlled trial Yen et al. ( | ||
| Diclofenac 50 mg twice daily: significant reduction of PD and attachment gain compared to controls (2.69 vs 2.11 and 2.35 vs 2.12 mms, respectively). Significant reduction of prostaglandin E2 in the GCF (0.06 in logarithmic scale vs no change in controls) | Randomized-controlled trial Oduncuoglu et al. ( | ||
| Resolvins | Reducing activation of neutrophils | N/A | Systematic review |
NSAIDs non-steroid anti-inflammatory drugs, MD mean difference, CI confidence interval, CAL clinical attachment loss, PD pocket depth, BoP bleeding on probing, SDD subantimicrobial-dose doxycycline, PDT photodynamic therapy