Is there association between the chronic periodontitis and the low bone mineral density?
Abstract
The relationship between periodontal disease and osteoporosis is still explored. Most
published studies support that chronic periodontitis may predispose to osteoporosis which
characterized by low bone density, however the mechanism by which chronic periodontitis
may contribute to the low bone mineral density is still unknown. In this paper, the potential
mechanism that explain the association between chonic periodontitis and the low bone
mineral density will be discussed. Because of the low bone mineral density is the
implication of unbalanced bone remodeling, it proposed that the periodontal pathogen not
only had modulated the host response that could accelerate bone resorption, but also
decreased bone formation. The focus on this review is to analyse the action of periodontal
bacteria on bone formation disturbance that causing the low bone mineral density based on
the clinical, animal and laboratory experimental studies. Better understanding of this
correlation may provide useful and beneficial warnings for osteoporosis risk and may
prove essential design for intervention strategies to prevent the development and/or
progression of disease.
Collections
- LSP-Conference Proceeding [1874]