1. Oxidative stress links periodontal inflammation and renal function
- Author
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Helen R. Griffiths, Mutahir Rahman, Amneet Sidhu, Brenda Heaton, Charles J. Ferro, Caroline L. R. Brown, Praveen Sharma, Paul Cockwell, Irundika H.K. Dias, Anthony Fenton, Thomas Dietrich, and Iain L. C. Chapple
- Subjects
Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Periodontal tissue ,Renal function ,Original Article Clinical Periodontology ,structural equation modelling ,Systemic inflammation ,medicine.disease_cause ,urologic and male genital diseases ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Renal Insufficiency, Chronic ,Periodontitis ,Periodontal Diseases ,Inflammation ,business.industry ,Confounding ,030206 dentistry ,medicine.disease ,Oxidative Stress ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Periodontics ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Oxidative stress ,chronic kidney disease ,Cohort study ,Kidney disease - Abstract
Aims Patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) are also susceptible to periodontitis. The causal link between periodontitis and CKD may be mediated via systemic inflammation/oxidative stress. Using structural equation modelling (SEM), this cross‐sectional study aimed to explore the causal relationship between periodontal inflammation (PI) and renal function. Materials and methods Baseline data on 770 patients with stage 3–5 (pre‐dialysis) CKD from an ongoing cohort study were used. Detailed, bioclinical data on PI and renal function, as well as potential confounders and mediators of the relationship between the two, were collected. SEMs of increasing complexity were created to test the causal assumption that PI affects renal function and vice versa. Results Structural equation modelling confirmed the assumption that PI and renal function are causally linked, mediated by systemic oxidative stress. The magnitude of this effect was such that a 10% increase in PI resulted in a 3.0% decrease in renal function and a 10% decrease in renal function resulted in a 25% increase in PI. Conclusions Periodontal inflammation represents an occult source of oxidative stress in patients with CKD. Further clinical studies are needed to confirm whether periodontal therapy, as a non‐pharmacological approach to reducing systemic inflammatory/oxidative stress burden, can improve outcomes in CKD.
- Published
- 2021