Periodontal disease and osteoporosis association and mechanisms: A review of the literature

Periodontitis and osteoporosis, diseases that affect millions of people in world, present bone loss as common hallmark. Prevalence of both osteoporosis and tooth loss increase with advancing age in both women and men. Systemic bone loss has been proposed as a risk factor for periodontal disease with...

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Main Authors: Marcelo R. Marques, Marco A.D Silva, Silvana P. Barros
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidade Estadual de Campinas 2015-11-01
Series:Brazilian Journal of Oral Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://periodicos.sbu.unicamp.br/ojs/index.php/bjos/article/view/8641660
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spelling doaj-4d42bb48acb04d87a4a4ebd0acfc4dd32021-07-15T14:02:12ZengUniversidade Estadual de CampinasBrazilian Journal of Oral Sciences1677-32252015-11-012410.20396/bjos.v2i4.8641660Periodontal disease and osteoporosis association and mechanisms: A review of the literatureMarcelo R. Marques0Marco A.D Silva1Silvana P. Barros2Department of Morphology/University of CampinasDepartment of Morphology/University of CampinasDepartment of Morphology/University of CampinasPeriodontitis and osteoporosis, diseases that affect millions of people in world, present bone loss as common hallmark. Prevalence of both osteoporosis and tooth loss increase with advancing age in both women and men. Systemic bone loss has been proposed as a risk factor for periodontal disease with increasing evidences that osteoporosis, and the underlying loss of bone mass characteristic of this disease, is associated with periodontal disease and tooth loss. Periodontitis has long been defined as an infection-mediated destruction of the alveolar bone and soft tissue attachment to the tooth, responsible for most tooth loss in adult populations. Current evidences including several prospective studies support an association of osteoporosis with the onset and progression of periodontal disease in humans. Systemic loss of bone density in osteoporosis, including that of the jaw, may provide a host system that is increasingly susceptible to infectious destruction of periodontal tissue. Studies have provided evidence that hormones, heredity, and other host factors influence periodontal disease’s incidence and severity. This paper reviews the role of estrogen deficiency and osteoporosis in oral bone healthy and the current evidences on the association between periodontal disease and osteoporosis.https://periodicos.sbu.unicamp.br/ojs/index.php/bjos/article/view/8641660Age . Bone loss. Periodontitis. Osteoporosis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marcelo R. Marques
Marco A.D Silva
Silvana P. Barros
spellingShingle Marcelo R. Marques
Marco A.D Silva
Silvana P. Barros
Periodontal disease and osteoporosis association and mechanisms: A review of the literature
Brazilian Journal of Oral Sciences
Age . Bone loss. Periodontitis. Osteoporosis
author_facet Marcelo R. Marques
Marco A.D Silva
Silvana P. Barros
author_sort Marcelo R. Marques
title Periodontal disease and osteoporosis association and mechanisms: A review of the literature
title_short Periodontal disease and osteoporosis association and mechanisms: A review of the literature
title_full Periodontal disease and osteoporosis association and mechanisms: A review of the literature
title_fullStr Periodontal disease and osteoporosis association and mechanisms: A review of the literature
title_full_unstemmed Periodontal disease and osteoporosis association and mechanisms: A review of the literature
title_sort periodontal disease and osteoporosis association and mechanisms: a review of the literature
publisher Universidade Estadual de Campinas
series Brazilian Journal of Oral Sciences
issn 1677-3225
publishDate 2015-11-01
description Periodontitis and osteoporosis, diseases that affect millions of people in world, present bone loss as common hallmark. Prevalence of both osteoporosis and tooth loss increase with advancing age in both women and men. Systemic bone loss has been proposed as a risk factor for periodontal disease with increasing evidences that osteoporosis, and the underlying loss of bone mass characteristic of this disease, is associated with periodontal disease and tooth loss. Periodontitis has long been defined as an infection-mediated destruction of the alveolar bone and soft tissue attachment to the tooth, responsible for most tooth loss in adult populations. Current evidences including several prospective studies support an association of osteoporosis with the onset and progression of periodontal disease in humans. Systemic loss of bone density in osteoporosis, including that of the jaw, may provide a host system that is increasingly susceptible to infectious destruction of periodontal tissue. Studies have provided evidence that hormones, heredity, and other host factors influence periodontal disease’s incidence and severity. This paper reviews the role of estrogen deficiency and osteoporosis in oral bone healthy and the current evidences on the association between periodontal disease and osteoporosis.
topic Age . Bone loss. Periodontitis. Osteoporosis
url https://periodicos.sbu.unicamp.br/ojs/index.php/bjos/article/view/8641660
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