Periodontitis and Diabetes Interrelationships: Role of Inflammation

Anthony M. Iacopino Dr.
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引用次数: 391

Abstract

Diabetes mellitus is a systemic disease with several major complications affecting both the quality and length of life. One of these complications is periodontal disease (periodontitis). Periodontitis is much more than a localized oral infection. Recent data indicate that periodontitis may cause changes in systemic physiology. The interrelationships between periodontitis and diabetes provide an example of systemic disease predisposing to oral infection, and once that infection is established, the oral infection exacerbates systemic disease. In this case, it may also be possible for the oral infection to predispose to systemic disease. In order to understand the cellular/molecular mechanisms responsible for such a cyclical association, one must identify common physiological changes associated with diabetes and periodontitis that produce a synergy when the conditions coexist. A potential mechanistic link involves the broad axis of inflammation, specifi-cally immune cell phenotype, serum lipid levels, and tissue homeostasis. Diabetes-induced changes in immune cell function produce an inflammatory immune cell phenotype (upregulation of proinflammatory cytokines from monocytes/polymorphonuclear leukocytes and downregulation of growth factors from macrophages). This predisposes to chronic inflammation, progressive tissue breakdown, and diminished tissue repair capacity. Periodontal tissues frequently manifest these changes because they are constantly wounded by substances emanating from bacterial biofilms. Diabetic patients are prone to elevated low density lipoprotein cholesterol and triglycerides (LDL/TRG) even when blood glucose levels are well controlled. This is significant, as recent studies demonstrate that hyperlipidemia may be one of the factors associated with diabetes-induced immune cell alterations. Recent human studies have established a relationship between high serum lipid levels and periodontitis. Some evidence now suggests that periodontitis itself may lead to elevated LDL/TRG. Periodontitis-induced bacteremia/endotoxemia has been shown to cause elevations of serum proinflammatory cytokines such as interleukin-1 beta (IL-1β) and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α), which have been demonstrated to produce alterations in lipid metabolism leading to hyperlipidemia. Within this context, periodontitis may contribute to elevated proinflammatory cytokines/serum lipids and potentially to systemic disease arising from chronic hyperlipidemia and/or increased inflammatory mediators. These cytokines can produce an insulin resistance syndrome similar to that observed in diabetes and initiate destruction of pancreatic β cells leading to development of diabetes. Thus, there is potential for periodontitis to exacerbate diabetes-induced hyperlipidemia, immune cell alterations, and diminished tissue repair capacity. It may also be possible for chronic periodontitis to induce diabetes. Ann Periodontol 2001;6:125-137.

牙周炎和糖尿病的相互关系:炎症的作用
糖尿病是一种全身性疾病,有几种主要并发症影响生命质量和寿命。其中一种并发症是牙周病(牙周炎)。牙周炎不仅仅是局部的口腔感染。最近的数据表明,牙周炎可能引起全身生理的变化。牙周炎和糖尿病之间的相互关系为易引起口腔感染的全身性疾病提供了一个例子,一旦感染确立,口腔感染就会加剧全身性疾病。在这种情况下,口腔感染也可能导致全身性疾病。为了理解这种周期性关联的细胞/分子机制,人们必须确定与糖尿病和牙周炎相关的共同生理变化,当这两种疾病共存时,它们会产生协同作用。潜在的机制联系涉及炎症的广泛轴,特别是免疫细胞表型,血清脂质水平和组织稳态。糖尿病诱导的免疫细胞功能改变产生炎症性免疫细胞表型(单核/多形核白细胞促炎细胞因子上调,巨噬细胞生长因子下调)。这容易导致慢性炎症、进行性组织破坏和组织修复能力下降。牙周组织经常表现出这些变化,因为它们经常受到细菌生物膜产生的物质的伤害。糖尿病患者即使血糖水平控制良好,也容易出现低密度脂蛋白胆固醇和甘油三酯(LDL/TRG)升高。这是重要的,因为最近的研究表明,高脂血症可能是与糖尿病诱导的免疫细胞改变相关的因素之一。最近的人类研究已经建立了高血脂水平和牙周炎之间的关系。现在有证据表明牙周炎本身可能导致LDL/TRG升高。牙周炎引起的菌血症/内毒素血症已被证明会引起血清促炎细胞因子的升高,如白细胞介素-1β (IL-1β)和肿瘤坏死因子-α (TNF-α),这已被证明会引起脂质代谢的改变,导致高脂血症。在这种情况下,牙周炎可能导致促炎细胞因子/血脂升高,并可能导致慢性高脂血症和/或炎症介质增加引起的全身性疾病。这些细胞因子可以产生胰岛素抵抗综合征,类似于在糖尿病中观察到的,并启动胰腺β细胞的破坏,导致糖尿病的发展。因此,牙周炎有可能加剧糖尿病引起的高脂血症、免疫细胞改变和组织修复能力下降。慢性牙周炎也可能诱发糖尿病。牙周病杂志2001;6:125-137。
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