A steadily growing body of evidence points to a two-way connection between oral health and systemic disease.
Periodontitis, the inflammation and disease of tissues surrounding the teeth, is already known to be a result of type 2 diabetes, but there is research to suggest that it may also cause diabetes—as well as certain other diseases.
“What happens in your body impacts your mouth, and that in turn impacts your body. It’s truly a cycle of life,” said Professor Purnima Kumar of The Ohio State University. “What is more dynamic than the gateway to your body – the mouth?” she continued. “It’s so ignored when you think about it, and it’s the most forward-facing part of your body that interfaces with the environment, and it’s connected to this entire tubing system. And yet we study everything but the mouth.”
The link between oral health and type 2 diabetes was first established in the 1990s, and Prof Kumar has led many investigations into this area. She was lead author in a study published last year that investigated the oral microbiomes of people with and without type 2 diabetes, and the effects of nonsurgical periodontitis treatment.
“Our studies have led up to the conclusion that people with diabetes have a different microbiome from people who are not diabetic,” Prof Kumar said. “We know that changing the bacteria in your mouth and restoring them back to what your body knows as healthy and friendly bacteria actually improves your glycemic control.”
The rough picture that has emerged is that oral bacteria are aerobic, but even small changes such as a few days of not brushing teeth can trigger a cascade that results in the bacteria shifting to an anaerobic, fermentative state producing toxins and byproducts. It becomes, as Prof Kumar puts it, “a septic tank” that stimulates the immune system and causes an inflammatory state, producing signalling products that bacteria then feed on.
“Then this community – it’s an ecosystem – shifts. Organisms that can break down protein start growing more, and organisms that can breathe in an oxygen-starved environment grow. The bacterial profile and, more importantly, the function of the immune system changes,” she explained.
The inflammation causes pores to open in the lining of the mouth, allowing the bacteria entry to the body.
“The body is producing inflammation in response to these bacteria, and those inflammatory products are also moving to the bloodstream, so now you’re getting hammered twice. Your body is trying to protect you and turning against itself,” Prof Kumar said. “And these pathogens are having a field day, crossing boundaries they were never supposed to cross.”
Though the relationship between oral health and certain disease is a complex one, Prof Kumar said prevention was exceedingly simple. Daily brushing and flossing with twice-yearly dentist visits for cleaning were sufficient.
Source: News-Medical.Net
Journal information: Kumar, P. S., et al. (2020) Subgingival Host-Microbial Interactions in Hyperglycemic Individuals. Journal of Dental Research. doi.org/10.1177/0022034520906842.