AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study explores the link between chronic kidney disease (CKD) and periodontal disease, proposing that changes in saliva and oral microbiota due to CKD could initiate periodontal disease rather than the other way around.
  • - Using animal models, researchers found that kidney disease led to a significant reduction in alveolar bone height and caused changes in salivary biochemistry and oral microbiota composition, resulting in a dysbiotic environment.
  • - Findings suggest that interactions between oral bacteria and the systemic conditions of CKD can exacerbate periodontal issues, as co-housing healthy rats with those having kidney disease improved periodontal health, while transferring diseased microbiota caused periodontal disease in healthy mice.

Article Abstract

Background And Hypothesis: It is presently unclear why there is a high prevalence of periodontal disease in individuals living with chronic kidney disease (CKD). Whilst some have argued that periodontal disease causes CKD, we hypothesised that alterations in saliva and the oral microenvironment in organisms with kidney disease may initiate periodontal disease by causing dysbiosis of the oral microbiota.

Methods: Experimental kidney disease was created using adenine feeding and subtotal nephrectomy in rats, and by adenine feeding in mice. Loss of periodontal bone height was assessed using a dissecting microscope supported by micro-CT, light, confocal and electron microscopy, and immunohistochemistry. Salivary biochemistry was assessed using NMR spectroscopy. The oral microbiome was evaluated using culture-based and molecular methods, and the transmissibility of dysbiosis was assessed using co-caging and microbial transfer experiments into previously germ-free recipient mice.

Results: We demonstrate that experimental kidney disease causes a reproducible reduction of alveolar bone height, without gingival inflammation or overt hyperparathyroidism but with evidence of failure of bone formation at the periodontal crest. We show that kidney disease alters the biochemical composition of saliva and induces progressive dysbiosis of the oral microbiota, with microbial samples from animals with kidney disease displaying reduced overall bacterial growth, increased alpha diversity, reduced abundance of key components of the healthy oral microbiota such as Streptococcus and Rothia, and an increase in minor taxa including those from gram-negative phyla Proteobacteria and Bacteroidetes. Co-housing diseased rats with healthy ones ameliorates the periodontal disease phenotype, whilst transfer of oral microbiota from mice with kidney disease causes periodontal disease in germ-free animals with normal kidney function.

Conclusions: We advocate that periodontal disease should be regarded as a complication of kidney disease, initiated by oral dysbiosis through mechanisms independent of overt inflammation or hyperparathyroidism.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ndt/gfae266DOI Listing

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