Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
Elevated sclerostin levels in serum and alveolar bone of osteoporotic patients may exert deleterious effects on the periodontium, thereby contributing to the progression and increased severity of periodontal disease. Moreover, sclerostin is considered a potential biomarker for elucidating the shared pathophysiological mechanisms linking postmenopausal osteoporosis and periodontitis
Full description
In this study, it has aimed to reveal the relationship between postmenopausal osteoporosis and periodontitis by comparing inflammatory (TNF-α) and bone destruction biomarker (sclerostin) levels in serum and GCF and clinical periodontal parameters in postmenopausal women with decreased BMD. A total of 80 postmenopausal female have included in our study. Patients have divided into 4 groups according to radiological and clinical examination results as control (Group K), periodontitis (Group P), osteoporosis (Group O) and osteoporosis-periodontitis (Group OP). Clinically, PI, GI, BI, PPD and CAL have measured. TNF-α and sclerostin levels have measured by ELISA method in serum and DOS samples. In addition, L1-L4, femoral total and femoral neck BMD values have determined by DXA method. For statistical analyses, Shapiro Wilk test, Mann Whitney U test, Anova test, Kruskal Wallis test, Post Hoc Bonferroni test, Pearson Chi-Square test, Fisher's Exact test, Pearson and Spearman correlation have used. Results: Serum sclerostin level of Group OP and Group P and GCF sclerostin level of Group OP, Group P and Group O have higher than Group K (p<0.05). A positive correlation has found between serum sclerostin level and serum TNF-α (p=0.013, r=0.278) with GCF TNF-α (p=0.001, r=0.356) levels (p<0.05). A positive correlation has found between GCF TNF-α (p=0.002, r=0.334) and GCF sclerostin level (p<0.05).
The increased level of sclerostin in serum and GCF in osteoporosis patients may increase the severity of periodontal disease by creating a destructive effect on the periodontium; It is also thought that it can be used as a biomarker to elucidate the common mechanism in the relationship between postmenopausal osteoporosis and periodontitis.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
80 participants in 4 patient groups
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal