Salivary LL-37 and periodontal health in children exposed to passive smoking.
Karsiyaka Hendek. Meltem M; Erkmen Almaz. Merve M; Olgun. Ebru E; Kisa. Ucler U
Key Findings
- Children exposed to passive smoking had significantly higher plaque and gingival index scores.
- Salivary LL-37 levels were about 34% lower in passive‑smoke‑exposed kids compared to unexposed peers.
- Higher salivary cotinine confirmed greater smoke exposure in the affected group.
Practical Outcomes
- Avoiding environments with second‑hand smoke may help preserve natural antimicrobial peptides like LL-37 and support better oral health. For biohackers, focusing on strict smoke‑free zones and robust oral hygiene (e.g., antimicrobial mouth rinses) could mitigate the negative impact on gum health. Currently there are no proven LL-37 supplements, so lifestyle control remains the primary actionable step.
Summary
Kids who breathe other people's cigarette smoke have lower levels of the natural mouth defender LL-37 and worse gum health. The study shows passive smoking can weaken the mouth's antimicrobial shield, leading to more plaque and gum inflammation.
Abstract
Antimicrobial peptides play an important role in the local defence of oral cavity. Cigarette smoke has detrimental effects on immune defence mechanisms. The effect of passive smoking on salivary LL-37, as an antimicrobial peptide, in children has not yet been reported. The aims of this study were to evaluate salivary LL-37 levels in PS-exposed and PS-unexposed children and to investigate the association between salivary LL-37 levels and periodontal clinical parameters. Unstimulated salivary samples were collected from 180 children (90 PS-exposed [38 girls and 52 boys; mean age: 9.36 ± 1.60 years] and 90 PS-unexposed [43 girls and 47 boys; mean age: 9.02 ± 1.71 years]) in this study. Periodontal clinical parameters, including plaque index (PI), gingival index (GI), probing depth (PD), and clinical attachment level (CAL), were recorded in all children. Salivary cotinine and LL-37 levels were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. PI and GI values in PS-exposed children were significantly higher than those in PS-unexposed children. The mean salivary cotinine concentration was significantly higher in PS-exposed children than in control subjects. The mean salivary LL-37 concentration of PS-exposed children was significantly lower (100.71 ± 72.14 pg/mL) than that of PS-unexposed children (151.84 ± 107.89 pg/mL). Passive smoking could suppress salivary LL-37 concentrations in children.
Study Information
pubmed
2019
2019-02-11T00:00:00.000Z
10.1111/ipd.12459
10
31