What Is Dentists’ Role in Modulating Environmental and Epigenetic Determinant in Oral Health of Diabetic Patients?  被引量:1

What Is Dentists’ Role in Modulating Environmental and Epigenetic Determinant in Oral Health of Diabetic Patients?

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作  者:Zhengzhang Guo Zhengzhang Guo(Department of Nutritional Science, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada;Department of Human Biology, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada)

机构地区:[1]Department of Nutritional Science, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada [2]Department of Human Biology, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada

出  处:《Journal of Biosciences and Medicines》2023年第2期152-168,共17页生物科学与医学(英文)

摘  要:Background and Purpose: With the unexpectedly rapid increase in the prevalence of types of diabetes worldwide, this chronic disease is no longer being viewed as a systemic health issue, but also treated as the start of the deadly disease. As the sixth complication of diabetes, periodontitis is a chronic inflammatory condition that leads directly and indirectly to a severer condition of diabetes via its underlying mechanisms. Interestingly, both diseases are not been fully identified in their bidirectional relationships by researchers. Thus, healthcare agencies must pay appropriate attention. This literature review paper aims to investigate and discuss dentists’ role in modulating environmental and epigenetic determinants in the oral health of diabetic patients based on the bidirectional relationship between these diseases, their prevalence and how treatment of one disease affects the other. Methods: The authors conducted electronic searches in PubMed, Google Scholar, One Search UofT, ScienceDirect, and the National Library of Medicine. The paper also included gray literature from government resources related to the topic. The paper will review the epidemiology, pathogenesis, and epigenetics of both diabetes and periodontal disease and their functions with each other. Results: The literature has consistently shown that diabetes and periodontal disease have responded to the formation and severity of each other. Patients with pre- and diabetes have potentially higher risks of causing periodontal disease and other complications if adequate diagnosis and treatment are not involved timely. The combination of risk factors, including individual, social, environmental, and genetic, play a crucial role in the development of diabetes and the severity of periodontitis. Conclusions: Based on the results, the collaboration between dentists and other healthcare practitioners is inevitable in the overall development of treatment for both diseases. With the proper and updated knowledge, dentists can benefit patients’ overall Background and Purpose: With the unexpectedly rapid increase in the prevalence of types of diabetes worldwide, this chronic disease is no longer being viewed as a systemic health issue, but also treated as the start of the deadly disease. As the sixth complication of diabetes, periodontitis is a chronic inflammatory condition that leads directly and indirectly to a severer condition of diabetes via its underlying mechanisms. Interestingly, both diseases are not been fully identified in their bidirectional relationships by researchers. Thus, healthcare agencies must pay appropriate attention. This literature review paper aims to investigate and discuss dentists’ role in modulating environmental and epigenetic determinants in the oral health of diabetic patients based on the bidirectional relationship between these diseases, their prevalence and how treatment of one disease affects the other. Methods: The authors conducted electronic searches in PubMed, Google Scholar, One Search UofT, ScienceDirect, and the National Library of Medicine. The paper also included gray literature from government resources related to the topic. The paper will review the epidemiology, pathogenesis, and epigenetics of both diabetes and periodontal disease and their functions with each other. Results: The literature has consistently shown that diabetes and periodontal disease have responded to the formation and severity of each other. Patients with pre- and diabetes have potentially higher risks of causing periodontal disease and other complications if adequate diagnosis and treatment are not involved timely. The combination of risk factors, including individual, social, environmental, and genetic, play a crucial role in the development of diabetes and the severity of periodontitis. Conclusions: Based on the results, the collaboration between dentists and other healthcare practitioners is inevitable in the overall development of treatment for both diseases. With the proper and updated knowledge, dentists can benefit patients’ overall

关 键 词:PERIODONTITIS Diabetes Mellitus EPIGENETIC PATHOGENESIS Epidemiology 

分 类 号:R58[医药卫生—内分泌]

 

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