Potential role of salivary vitamin D antimicrobial peptide LL-37 and interleukins in severity of dental caries: an exvivo study.
Hegde. Mithra N MN; Kumari N. Suchetha S
Key Findings
- Salivary vitamin D decreases as dental caries severity increases
- LL‑37 levels are higher in caries‑free individuals but not statistically significant
- IL‑6 and IL‑17A levels show no significant differences between caries‑free and caries‑active groups
Practical Outcomes
- Keeping vitamin D levels sufficient may help protect against cavities, so regular monitoring and supplementation could be beneficial for oral health. LL‑37 doesn’t currently offer a clear actionable target, and inflammation markers aren’t useful for guiding interventions based on this study.
Summary
The study found that lower levels of vitamin D in saliva are linked to more severe tooth decay, while the antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 was slightly higher in people without cavities but not enough to be statistically meaningful. Inflammation markers IL‑6 and IL‑17A didn’t show clear differences between those with and without cavities.
Abstract
Vitamin D performs various functions as a hormone by promoting calcium absorption but plays a major role in innate immunity,cell differentiation, cell maturation through its genomic effects via vitamin D receptor. The immune response also plays a major role in tooth surface and supporting structure destruction and playing a major factor in high caries formation. The inflammatory cytokines are released has proinflammatory cytokines and stimulate cells in disease process. Therefore, in the present study we have evaluated the association of salivary vitamin D, LL-37, interleukins 6 and 17A in various levels of severity of dental caries. Ethical approval was obtained (NU/CEC/2020/0339), 377 individuals reporting to department of conservative dentistry and endodontics, AB Shetty memorial institute of dental sciences were included based on inclusion criteria. The individuals were further divided into caries free(N = 105) and caries active(N = 272) based on their caries prevalence. The salivary were collected and evaluated for vitamin D, LL-37,IL-17A and IL-6.Results were statistically analysed with SPSS vs 22 (IBM Corp, USA). Normally distributed data were expressed as mean ± SD. Skewed data were expressed as median and interquartile range. To compare (mean) outcome measures between the two groups unpaired independent t-test was applied and for values in median IQR, Mann Whitney U test was used. All statistical analysis for P value were two-sided and significance was set to P ≤ 0.05. The study showed that, the salivary vitamin D statistically decreased with increasing severity of caries which showed that vitamin D plays an important role in prevention of caries. Antimicrobial peptide LL-37 was higher in caries free group but was not statistically significant, salivary IL-6 level was higher in caries active group but intergroup comparison did not show significant difference. Salivary IL-17A did not show statistically significant between caries active and caries free group. The salivary levels of vitamin D may play a vital role in prevalence of dental caries and its severity which can be a underlying cause in presence of other etiological factors.
Study Information
pubmed
2024
2024-01-13T00:00:00.000Z
10.1186/s12903-023-03749-7
9
35