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Saliva May Offer Window Into Periodontal Disease, Type 2 Diabetes
Saliva may be a marker for both periodontal disease activity and hyperglycemia in uncontrolled type 2 diabetes, according to research presented here at the annual 89th meeting of the Endocrine Society (ENDO).

TORONTO, CANADA -- June 7, 2007 -- Saliva may be a marker for both periodontal disease activity and hyperglycemia in uncontrolled type 2 diabetes, according to research presented here at the annual 89th meeting of the Endocrine Society (ENDO).


Carol W. Bassim, DMD, doctor of medical dentistry, research fellow, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, United States, noted that saliva holds much potential as a marker for disease in periodontitis and type 2 diabetes.


"We are seeing that saliva may be a way to check for periodontal disease and diabetes, more than is serum," said Dr. Bassim. "We know that inflammation and infection in periodontal disease is associated with poorly controlled type 2 diabetes."


Investigators prospectively studied subjects who presented with either severe periodontitis or moderate periodontal disease. All had uncontrolled type 2 diabetes. Specifically, they were measuring salivary procalcitonin (ProCT) correlated with diabetic glucose control.


"We know that if you get septic, for instance, and have severe systemic inflammation or infection, the degree of procalcitonin is significantly increased," said Dr. Bassim.


Dr. Bassim and colleagues collected samples of non-stimulated whole saliva through expectoration from 22 patients with periodontitis with uncontrolled type 2 diabetes; their HgbA1C exceeded 7.0. They also conducted a complete periodontal examination and collected serum from each subject.


Researchers discovered salivary-ProCT correlated with bleeding-on-probing, bleeding that indicates active periodontal disease (r=0.50, P =.03, n=18). In addition, salivary-ProCT was correlated with HgbA1c in each patient, at baseline measurements and at a three-month follow-up visit (r=0.43, P =.01, n=33).


Investigators found periodontal indicators were not directly correlated with HgbA1c. Moreover, serum levels of ProCT were not correlated with either periodontal indicators or glucose control. Serum levels of ProCT were decreased compared to that of saliva: mean 92 vs. 246 pg/ml. "Salivary amounts seem to matter more than serum," observed Dr. Bassim.


Future research may lead to the potential for a salivary biomarker of both periodontitis and poorly controlled type 2 diabetes, according to Dr. Bassim.


"There is no quick and easy test for periodontitis," said Dr. Bassim. "It would be a wonderful thing to have a biomarker like saliva in that sense. For endocrinologists, it would be a quick and easy way to look at HbA1c values in a clinical setting and track those values."


The Department of Veterans Affairs in the U.S. supported the study.


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