Hygiene Tribune Middle East & Africa No. 2, 2020
Periodontal inflammation simplified
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Vol.10_HT.indd NL Y O LS NA IO SS FE O PR NT AL DE www.dental-tribune.me PUBLISHED IN DUBAI Periodontal inflammation simplified March-April 2020 | No. 2, Vol. 10 DENTAL CONFEXPO HYGIENIST SEMINAR CAPP DENTAL 1 3 - 1 4 N O V DUBAI, UAE 2 0 2 0 By Dr Fay Goldstep, Canada sors to resolvins. Therefore, diet can affect the resolution of inflammation. 5. Inflammation is affected by many risk factors, including genetics. 6. Overexpression of inflammation is a key aspect of ageing that may influence and link diseases in the older individual. Inflammatory mechanisms are critical in the development and progression of the diseases of ageing. 7. Treatment of periodontal disease should not only reflect the bacterial stimulus, but must take into account the inflammatory component of the disease as well. Inflammation has been studied since ancient times. It was observed that, as a result of irritation, injury or infection, tissues throughout the body react by increased redness (rubor), swelling (tumour), heat (calor) and pain (dolour).1 Today, we know that inflammation is a process driven by cells responding to signals from the body to fend off what it perceives as an intrusion. This leads to the accumulation of fluid and leukocytes in the extravascular tissue.2 The inflammatory response is a beneficial process. In the healthy periodontium, bacteria in the crevicular fluid enter the bloodstream and elicit a protective response during chewing, toothbrushing and so on. The inflammatory response occurs routinely to counteract microbial challenges and eliminate them, without our awareness. We become aware of inflammation only when the response is prolonged and not successful in resolving the microbial challenge. Chronic inflammation is a destructive process that occurs when the response is not able to complete its normal cycle of removing bacteria and restoring the situation to health. The process continues for an extended period while the body continues trying to eliminate the bacteria. Tissue damage occurs owing to the action of the cells involved in inflammation and their products. This article discusses these factors and will attempt to bring simplicity and clarity to a very complex topic. Fig. 1: The acute response. Periodontal tissue: Bacteria initiate the immune response by producing vascular dilation, increased permeability of capillaries and increased blood flow. Cellular level: The crevicular fluid contains neutrophils, macrophages and other inflammatory cells. Macrophages eliminate bacteria by phagocytosis. The inflammatory cells secrete cytokines that regulate the inflammatory response. Biochemical level: Arachidonic acid (released primarily by neutrophils) produces prostaglandin. Research on periodontal inflammation is extensive. The following provides a synopsis of current knowledge: 1. Periodontal inflammation is initiated by a bacterial stimulus. 2. A cascade of events occurs in response to the stimulus (first in- nate and then adaptive responses). 3. The innate response must be actively resolved. This requires substances called lipoxins, resolvins and protectins. Resolution is an active process to restore healthy equilibrium. 4. Omega-3 fatty acids are precur- AD AD The bacterial challenge The bacterial aetiology of periodontal disease has been established for over a hundred years. Recent studies have also shown that it is not just the number of bacteria, but the specific bacterial types that are implicated in the pathogenesis of periodontal disease. By the 1980s, it was established that sites with periodontal disease contain predominantly Gram-negative organisms, whereas healthy sites are populated with Grampositive bacteria.3 In the 1990s, the particular inflammatory response of the affected individual (the host), as well as the presence of certain specific bacteria, was found to be associated with active periodontal disease progression. The four major species implicated were Porphyromonas gingivalis, Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans, Tannerellaforsythensis (renamed Tannerella forsythia) and Treponema denticola.4 These pathogens are found in ecological complexes (biofilm). An ecological shift in the biofilm, such as a change in available nutrients, can lead to the emergence of these specific microbial pathogens.5 Periodontal inflammation is initiated by the products of biofilm bacteria, such as lipopolysaccharide molecules—these are components of the cell wall of Gram-negative bacteria; they are not found in Gram-positive bacteria. This creates a cascade of reactions.6 In healthy periodontium, these products are eliminated, and the inflammation is resolved. In the compromised periodontium, perio-pathogens such as P. gingivalis suppress the innate host response by paralysing a key step in the host defence system. This permits both P. gingivalis and the commensal (benign or beneficial) bacteria in the pocket to thrive and grow without any recognition or resistance from the host.7 P. gingivalis may be present in low concentrations, but it still has a profound effect on the amount and composition of the surrounding bacterial environment, leading to periodontitis. For this reason, P. gingivalis has been called a “keystone pathogen”, a species which supports and remodels a microbial community to promote pathogenesis.8 Many of the bacterial model studies have focused on P. gingivalis, but the model applies to the other perio-pathogenic species as well. The scenario is as follows: in the deep, inaccessible subgingival space of the compromised periodontium, P. gingivalis impedes the defence system of the body by blocking protective host receptors.9 This creates a dysbiosis between the host and the plaque, interrupting the status quo and tipping the balance towards inflammatory disease. Just a very small level of P. gingivalis leads to increased numbers of normally benign bacteria. This encourages a greater inflammatory response and tissue breakdown. The breakdown products, such as collagen fragments, flood the crevicular fluid and are a great source of nutrition for P. gingivalis and other perio-pathogens that require essential amino acids as a food source. (Caries pathogens thrive on sugars.9) In this way, keystone pathogens manipulate their environment (the periodontium) and their normally docile neighbours into creating a very comfortable environment and abundant food supply for their own benefit. The bacteria and the host both contribute to disease, and the affected periodontal sites contain a unique microbial composition not seen in health.10 Changes in the composition of gut microbiota have also been implicated in the pathogenesis of other inflammatory diseases, such as inflammatory bowel disease, as well as colon cancer, obesity, diabetes and coronary heart disease. Future treatment and prevention of these diseases may involve the identification and targeting of the keystone pathogens.9 The healthy, beneficial inflammatory response The reaction to infection or any other noxious stimulus in the body precipitates two distinct and interconnected reactions: the innate and the adaptive. The innate response is an evolutionary defence mechanism that provides immediate protection. Phagocytic (ingesting) cells such as neutrophils, monocytes and macrophages identify and eliminate ÿPage E2[2] =>DTMEA_No.1. Vol.10_HT.indd E2 HYGIENE TRIBUNE Dental Tribune Middle East & Africa Edition | 2/2020 ◊Page E1 braking signal for neutrophils.14 Aspirin transforms lipoxin into a more bioactive form with more powerful pro-resolving properties.18 Resolvins Resolvins are substances derived from omega-3 dietary fatty acids. Several clinical studies have shown that diets rich in omega-3 are useful in the prevention and treatment of arthritis, cardiovascular disease (CVD) and other inflammatory conditions. Fig. 2: The active resolution of the acute response. Periodontal tissue: The stimulus (bacteria) is removed. Cellular level: The crevicular fluid contains fewer, weakened neutrophils and remnants of bacteria. Biochemical level: Arachidonic acid produces lipoxins. Dietary omega-3 produces resolvins. Lipoxins and resolvins actively stop inflammation. foreign substances. These immune cells also release chemical mediators called cytokines that assist antibodies in clearing pathogens or marking them for destruction by other cells. The innate response is non-specific.1 The adaptive response is specific. Pathogens are recognised so that a stronger response will occur should these pathogens return in the future. The adaptive response is tailored to remove specific pathogens and to remember the pathogen’s antigen signature. T cells recognise foreign antigens and specifically target them. B cells produce antibodies against the antigen, and they assist the phagocytic cells in mounting a response to the noxious stimulus.1 In healthy periodontium, the innate response eliminates or neutralises foreign bodies, and is protective against injury or infection. The sequence is as follows:11 1. There is vascular dilation, enhanced permeability of capillaries, and increased blood flow. 2. Neutrophils (also known as polymorphonuclear leukocytes) are dispatched to the site. 3. Macrophages and others are recruited to the site. 4. Cell mediators (cytokines) are produced by these recruited immune cells and by local cells in the area, such as fibroblasts and osteoblasts. Cytokines are the mechanism the body uses for cell communication. They are biologi- Fig. 3: Return to health. cally active proteins that alter the function of the cell that releases it or the function of adjacent cells.12 They can act locally to regulate the inflammatory process or can be dispatched to distant sites.6 5. Chemokines (cytokines with chemotactic properties) are released and play an important role in further leukocyte recruitment.13 6. These cytokines work with the body to defend it from attack. The immune cells and their secreted chemicals attempt to destroy, dilute or wall off the injurious agent.12 7. T and B cells mediate the adaptive response. It is noteworthy that, although oral bacteria live close to a highly vascularised periodontium, very few bacteria cause systemic infections in a healthy individual. This is the result of the highly efficient innate host defence system that monitors bacterial growth and prevents bacterial intrusion into the local tissue. Dynamic equilibrium (homeostasis) exists between the dental plaque bacteria and the innate host defence system.7 This is the situation as it occurs in health. When there is a compromise in the health of the individual, systemically or locally, the process of inflammatory disease begins. Resolution of the inflammatory response Complete resolution of an acute in- Fig. 4: Early chronic lesion. Periodontal tissue: Increased plaque, breakdown of the periodontal ligament and ulceration of the epithelial lining; start of bone resorption. Cellular level: An increased number of neutrophils, macro phages and others. Biochemical level: Increased pro-inflammatory cytokine activity; arachidonic acid continues to produce prostaglandin; release of MMPs. flammatory response and the body’s return to homeostasis is necessary for health. The leukocytes and invading bacteria must be removed without leaving remnants of the conflict.14 In the past, it was thought that the innate response peters out passively as the pro-inflammatory signals decline.15 However, evidence now suggests that the resolution of inflammation and return to homeostasis is an actively regulated process, not a passive one.16 There are specialised pro-resolving lipid mediators in chemically distinct families that are involved in this process. These are lipoxins, resolvins and protectins. These substances are actively biosynthesised during the resolution phase of acute inflammation and act to control the magnitude and duration of inflammation.11 Lipoxins At the end of healthy inflammation, neutrophils stop secreting pro-inflammatory cytokines and begin synthesising compounds that actively halt inflammation. These compounds are called lipoxins. They are derived from lipids (arachidonic acid, a fatty acid found in cell membranes) released from neutrophils and other inflammatory cells.17 During acute inflammation, arachidonic acid is converted to pro-inflammatory mediators, including prostaglandin. In the healthy individual, the elevated prostaglandin level signals the need to resolve inflammation. This triggers a switch in the action of arachidonic acid to now produce lipoxins.17 Lipoxins are essentially a Fig. 5: Late chronic lesion. Periodontal tissue: Apical migration of pathogenic bacteria, such as P. gingivalis, further breakdown of the periodontal ligament and increased ulceration of the epithelial lining; severe bone resorption. Cellular level: More neutrophils, macrophages, etc. Biochemical level: Increased pro-inflammatory cytokines regulate release of MMPs (involved in bone resorption and collagen degradation). Collagen fragments provide nutrition Resolvins formed from omega-3 may be responsible for this.17 Resolvins act locally to stop neutrophil recruitment and infiltration. Neutrophils are present in inflamed or injured tissue, and their effective elimination is a prerequisite for complete resolution of the inflammatory response and return to homeostasis.19 Results from P. gingivalis-induced periodontitis animal studies showed topical resolvin treatment stopped the progression of periodontal disease.20 Silk threads were tied around rabbit teeth to trap bacteria, and then P. gingivalis was added to induce periodontitis. One group received topical application of resolvin, the other group received a placebo. The rabbits that received the topical resolvin remained healthy; the placebo group developed periodontal disease. Topical resolvin treatment stopped the progression of disease, and there was complete resolution of periodontal inflammation. Treatment resulted in bone regrowth to pre-disease levels. Histological evidence showed both new collagen and new bone deposition.20 The chronic maladaptive inflammatory response The primary aetiological basis for periodontal disease is bacterial. However, the excessive host inflammatory response and inadequate resolution of inflammation are critical to the pathogenesis of periodontitis.18 Periodontal disease results from the body’s failure to turn off its inflammatory response to infection. The result is chronic maladaptive inflammation.17 As discussed, keystone pathogens, such as P. gingivalis, create a dysbiosis between the host and dental plaque. An essential step in the innate mechanism is impaired, leading to growth in the number of commensal bacteria and increased inflammation. This produces an environment that exudes a rich source of nutrients, such as degraded host proteins, which are exactly what P. gingivalis needs for survival and growth. P. gingivalis continues to exploit the environmental change, leading to more bacteria, even higher inflammation and bone resorption, and a perfect niche space (deeper periodontal pockets) where all the processes can continue undisturbed.9 Chronic periodontitis has multiple aetiologies. The persistent bacterial infection of P. gingivalis is just one of these. Inflammatory disease represents a disruption of tissue homeostasis. Any factor (whether microbial or host-based) that can destabilise the homeostatic equilibrium can tip the balance towards inflammatory disease.8 Acute inflammation that is resolved within a reasonable time frame prevents tissue injury. Inadequate resolution and failure to return to homeostasis result in chronic inflammation and tissue destruction.18 In chronic, unresolved inflammation, the following applies: 1. Cellular and molecular responses to bacterial challenges involve constant adjustment and regulatory feedback.21 2. Neutrophils, macrophages and monocytes continue to secrete cytokines. This creates a complex chronic lesion that destroys the periodontium. 3. Cytokines promote the release of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs). (MMPs are proteolytic enzymes implicated in normal bone remodeling. They include collagenases. Virtually all collagenases found in periodontal disease are derived from host cells and not from bacteria.21 They are also the key mediators in irreversible tissue destruction in periodontitis and have been used as biomarkers of disease progression. 22) 4. Tissue destruction is not unidirectional. It is constantly being adjusted by host–bacteria interactions.21 5. Alveolar bone destruction is the result of the uncoupling of the normally tightly coupled processes of bone resorption and formation.21 6. Prostaglandin production plays a role in alveolar bone resorption. Cytokines are an intermediate mechanism between bacterial stimulation and tissue destruction. They were historically identified as leukocyte products, but many are also produced by other cell types, such as fibroblasts and osteoblasts.23 The balance between stimulatory and inhibitory cytokines, and the regulation and signalling of their receptors, may determine the level of periodontal tissue loss.23 The host response is the major contributing factor to chronic maladaptive periodontal disease. A deficient host response initiates the chronic condition, and a too vigorous response leads to further tissue breakdown.23 Risk factors for periodontal disease Clinical observation has shown remarkable variations in host responses between individuals and in their presentation of periodontal disease. Though microbial challenge is a primary initiating factor, there are many other variables that modify disease expression. These risk factors interfere with the way the body responds to bacterial invasion. Without the risk factors, the host may be capable of limiting periodontal tissue destruction. Disease modifiers, such as smoking, in the presence of bacterial accumulation may shift the immune response beyond normal parameters.24 Bacteria initiate periodontitis. They are essential, but they are insufficient. What is required is a susceptible host. Risk factors determine disease susceptibility, onset, progression, severity and outcome.21 Through the 1990s, studies were undertaken to establish specific risk factors for periodontal disease. Clinical presentation, expected progression and responses to therapy were found to be “a net integration of the host response modified by patient genetics and environmental factors”. These factors may shift the balance to more severe periodontal destruction.24 The various environmental, acquired and inherited risk factors were found to be diabetes, smoking, poor oral hygiene, specific microflora, stress, race and sex.25 Diabetes increases risk through an amplified inflammatory response and depressed wound healing.26 Diabetics have cytokines that respond to the bacterial challenge at a higher ÿPage E3[3] =>DTMEA_No.1. Vol.10_HT.indd E3 HYGIENE TRIBUNE Dental Tribune Middle East & Africa Edition | 2/2020 ◊Page E2 rate than normal. Gingival tissue and crevicular fluid contain elevated concentrations of these cytokines, producing high levels of MMPs that promote tissue destruction and disease severity.21 Environment Smoking contributes to increased severity by the release of toxins into the oral cavity. It is the identified environmental risk most strongly associated with periodontal disease. In some studies, the impact of smoking outweighed the effect of pathogenic bacteria as a determinant of outcome.27 Genetics Twin studies of adult periodontitis show greater concordance in periodontitis susceptibility between monozygotic twins than between dizygotic twins. It has been estimated that heredity accounts for about 50% of the enhanced risk of severe periodontitis.21 Given the critical role of neutrophils in inflammation, genetic defects in neutrophil function would be expected to affect periodontal disease, and this is the case. Genetic abnormalities in neutrophil function have been demonstrated in 75% of patients with juvenile periodontitis.21 Epigenetics The control of how certain genes are expressed in specific tissues can change throughout life through factors such as diet, stress, smoking and bacterial accumulation.28 This is called epigenetics. Epigenetic alterations in DNA result in long-lasting changes in the expression of selected genes.24 Rather than involving the variability of the genetic sequence itself, epigenetic regulation is a reversible modification in gene expression determined by environmental exposure. It may also be inheritable.29 The exposure actually changes the DNA through methylation of genetic sequences. The differential methylation of genes may contribute to the diseased state. The changes that persist in the tissue increase the susceptibility to reinfection. In this way, a previous bout of periodontal inflam- AD PRINT EVENTS EDUCATION SERVICES DIGITAL Dental Tribune International The World's Dental Marketplace www.dental-tribune.com mation may increase susceptibility to subsequent bouts of infection.30 Of course, there are also anatomical changes that result from periodontal disease, such as residual pockets and bony defects. These may also predispose the individual to further periodontal infection.31 Inflammation as a factor in diseases of ageing: The local–systemic link Chronic diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis, CVD, diabetes and periodontal disease may develop because of unrestrained inflammatory responses that have maladapted over decades.1,12 In inflammatory diseases, the innate and adaptive responses become unresolved and chronic. The tissue does not return to homeostasis.1 Chronic inflammation is characterised by the continued production of cytokines, arachidonic acid-derived modulators (such as prostaglandin) and many other products. Periodontitis, located in the oral cavity and, thus, easily observable, has been used as a model for other inflammatory diseases. Periodontitis is also unique among the inflammatory diseases because the aetiology is well known (bacterial plaque), and the pathogenesis is so well characterised.20 The periodontitis–systemic disease relationship has been studied extensively. There is substantial epidemiological evidence to suggest that periodontal inflammation can influence the course of systemic disease, especially CVD, diabetes and low-birthweight infants.20 Epidemiological studies (indirect evidence) have demonstrated statistical associations between poor oral health and several systemic diseases.32 This epidemiological evidence continues to grow. More direct evidence through experimental studies suggests that the local inflammatory burden presented by periodontal infection causes an increased systemic inflammatory burden; that is, local inflammation can be a modifier of systemic inflammation.20 Studies monitoring C-reactive protein (CRP) levels have shown this connection. CRP is one of the most reported biomarkers of systemic inflammation. It is a protein whose production is triggered by infection, trauma, necrosis and malignancy, and also linked to heart disease and diabetes.6 CRP is synthesised in the liver in response to pro-inflammatory cytokines. It is a component of normal serum, but an elevated serum CRP level reflects an elevation in systemic inflammation. An elevated CRP level has been associated with an increased risk of CVD20 and is also seen in periodontal disease.33 CRP produces biological actions that exacerbate the inflammatory response and may also impact the initiation or progression of systemic diseases such as atherosclerosis.34 A study on animals with induced periodontitis (ligature with P. gingivalis for six weeks, producing periodontitis) showed them to have elevated systemic CRP levels. After topical resolvin treatment, not only was the periodontal tissue returned to health, but the systemic level of CRP was returned to that associated with health. The resolvin treatment lowers the inflammatory burden locally, which results in a lower systemic burden.20 Another study using the same model of animals with periodontitis showed these animals to have greater atherosclerosis (measured by fatty plaque deposits in their major blood vessels) than the control subjects did.17 Inflammation-resistant subjects (with high lipoxin levels in their blood) not only failed to develop periodontal disease, but their arteries were almost completely free of plaque compared with the control subjects.17 Local inflammation from the periodontium may influence systemic inflamma- Fig. 6: The local–systemic link: Local inflammation produces ulcerations in the pocket epithelium, creating risks for distant-site infection or bacteraemia. Systemic dissemination of locally produced cytokines affects other organ systems. Bacterial diffusion releases biologically active molecules that trigger host responses in distant areas, elevating the serum cytokine level. The resulting cytokines affect arteries and organs. CRP synthesised in the liver as a result of circulating cytokines produces damage to organ systems. tion through several distinct pathways:35, 36 1. Local inflammation produces micro-ulcerations through the pocket epithelium, promoting risks for distant-site infections and transient bacteraemia. 2. There is systemic dissemination of locally produced inflammatory mediators (cytokines). These then begin to act systemically, affecting other organ systems. 3. Bacterial diffusion releases a variety of biologically active molecules, such as lipopolysaccharides (from the bacterial cell membrane), endotoxins, chemotactic peptides, proteins and others, that may enter the systemic circulation. These products trigger the host inflammatory response in areas far from the periodontium and elevate serum concentrations of cytokines. 4. The circulating cytokines produced by these responses affect arteries and organs. 5. CRP is synthesised in the liver in response to these circulating proinflammatory cytokines in the acute phase of inflammation. CRP can produce injurious effects on other organs, leading to vascular damage, CVD and stroke. The bottom line is that unresolved chronic local inflammation creates a toxic systemic situation. Bacteria, pro-inflammatory mediators and CRP cause damage at the local level, and the dissemination of these noxious substances causes damage throughout the body. The oral–systemic link is an artificial construct. The periodontal–systemic link is simply a local–systemic inflammation link. The periodontium is an integral part of the body’s systemic ecosystem. It is obvious that the local effect on one part of this ecosystem will impact the entire organism. Impact on patient care Understanding inflammatory response mechanisms is essential in developing innovative treatments for periodontal inflammation. Though scaling and root planing is the gold standard in non-surgical therapy for chronic periodontitis, it only addresses the bacterial aetiology of the disease, not its inflammatory progression. Much of periodontal disease is the result of the host response to the breaking down of the surrounding structures. The dynamic events of pathogenesis are determined primarily by the signalling and regulating molecules that direct cell function, the cytokines.21 Chronic inflammation supports the growth of pathogenic bacteria through the production of tissue breakdown products. Resolution of inflammation effectively eliminates the pathogen from the lesion by removing its food source.20 Advances in treatment must address the specific bacteriological factors, that is, the host response and the systemic progression of disease. When we are faced with new techniques and products designed to promote periodontal health, we should be open to innovation, but also judicious in our assessment. This is only possible if we are armed with a thorough knowledge of the mechanisms of periodontal inflammation and their sequelae. This knowledge supplies us with the tools to provide our patients with the best possible clinical outcome. Editorial note A list of references can be obtained from the publisher. This article was originally published in prevention-international magazine for oral health, Issue 1/2019. About the author Dr Fay Goldstep She is a fellow of the American College of Dentists, International Academy for DentalFacial Esthetics and American Society for Dental Aesthetics. Dr Goldstep has been a contributing author to four textbooks and has published more than 100 articles. She has been listed as one of the leaders in continuing education by Dentistry Today since 2002. Dr Goldstep is a consultant to a number of dental companies and maintains a private practice in Toronto in Canada. She can be contacted at goldstep@epdot.com.[4] =>DTMEA_No.1. Vol.10_HT.indd ) [page_count] => 4 [pdf_ping_data] => Array ( [page_count] => 4 [format] => PDF [width] => 808 [height] => 1191 [colorspace] => COLORSPACE_UNDEFINED ) [linked_companies] => Array ( [ids] => Array ( ) ) [cover_url] => [cover_three] => [cover] => [toc] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [title] => Periodontal inflammation simplified [page] => 01 ) ) [toc_html] =>[toc_titles] =>Table of contentsPeriodontal inflammation simplified
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