Dental caries and associated salivary biomarkers in patients with cystic fibrosis.
Ozsin-Ozler. Cansu C; Duruel. Onurcem O; Pinar. Asli A; Özbek. Begüm B; Yaz. İsmail İ; Ataman-Duruel. Emel Tuğba ET; Uzamis-Tekcicek. Meryem M; Gunes-Yalcın. Ebru E; Dogru-Ersoz. Deniz D; Kiper. Nural N; Tezcan. İlhan İ; Berker. Ezel E
Key Findings
- CF children had lower caries in permanent teeth and fewer filled primary teeth than controls
- Saliva of CF kids showed higher sodium, chloride, and total protein, while controls had higher bicarbonate and higher defensin peptides (HBD‑1, HNP‑1)
- LL‑37 levels were not significantly different between CF and healthy children
Practical Outcomes
- The data do not support any new LL‑37‑based protocol for improving dental health. For biohackers, the takeaway is that cystic fibrosis may confer some natural protection against cavities, but focusing on LL‑37 supplementation isn’t warranted; maintaining good oral hygiene remains the key actionable step.
Summary
A study of 21 children with cystic fibrosis and 23 healthy peers found that the CF kids had fewer cavities in permanent teeth and a different mix of saliva proteins, but the level of the antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 was about the same in both groups.
Abstract
To evaluate the caries status of the Cystic fibrosis (CF) children and adolescents with the comparation of some biochemical markers, secretory-immunoglobulin-A (sIgA), and antimicrobial peptides in the saliva. In this cross-sectional descriptive study, the approval Ethics Board was obtained. Unstimulated saliva samples were collected from CF and healthy control children (non-CF) patients. Both groups underwent the same dental and periodontal evaluation scheme of the assessment. Human beta defensin (HBD1), human alpha defensin (HNP-1), cathelicidin (LL-37), sIgA in saliva were evaluated by enzyme-linked immunoassay method. A general biochemical analysis was performed. Statistical analysis was performed by using Statistical Package for the Social Sciences Version 20.0 (SPSS Inc.). A total of 21 (9 male, 12 female) CF and 23 (11 male, 12 female) control patients were participated with the mean age of 10.17 ± 3.38 and 9.52 ± 2.15 years, respectively. In control children, DMFT/S (decayed-missing-filled-tooth/surface-in-permanent-dentition), dmft/s (decayed-missing-filled-tooth/surface-in-primary-dentition) values were higher; DT (decayed-tooth in permanent dentition), ft (filled-tooth in primary dentition) and plaque index values were statistically significantly higher (p = 0.042, p = 0.005, p = 0.038, respectively) than CF patients. Bicarbonate was higher in control group; sodium, chloride, and total protein were higher in CF group; magnesium, calcium and phosphate levels were similar in each group (p > 0.05). Alpha and beta defensin-1 levels in control group was statistically significantly higher (p = 0.037 and p = 0.020, respectively), while LL37 and sIgA were not statistically significantly higher (p > 0.05) than CF group. Children with CF had lower caries in permanent teeth, filling in primary teeth, and an altered salivary biomarker profile, especially in HNB1, HNP1. Therefore, it is important to conduct periodic oral-dental controls among CF patients during their childhood.
Study Information
pubmed
2022
2022-09-19T00:00:00.000Z
10.1002/ppul.26145
2
40