Diet and the microbial aetiology of dental caries: new paradigms

被引:97
作者
Bradshaw, David J. [1 ]
Lynch, Richard J. M. [1 ]
机构
[1] GlaxoSmithKline Consumer Healthcare, Weybridge KT13 0DE, Surrey, England
关键词
Diet; dental plaque; microbiology; dental caries; S; mutans; sugar; starch; STREPTOCOCCUS-MUTANS; ENAMEL DEMINERALIZATION; CHEWING GUMS; PLAQUE PH; VEILLONELLA-ALCALESCENS; POPULATION SHIFTS; ACID PRODUCTION; SUCROSE LEVELS; SALIVARY PH; IN-SITU;
D O I
10.1111/idj.12082
中图分类号
R78 [口腔科学];
学科分类号
1003 ;
摘要
The microbial and dietary factors that drive caries have been studied scientifically for 120years. Frequent and/or excessive sugar (especially sucrose) consumption has been ascribed a central role in caries causation, while Streptococcus mutans appeared to play the key role in metabolising sucrose to produce lactic acid, which can demineralise enamel. Many authors described caries as a transmissible infectious disease. However, more recent data have shifted these paradigms. Streptococcus mutans does not fulfil Koch's postulates - presence of the organism leading to disease, and absence of the organism precluding disease. Furthermore, molecular microbiological methods have shown that, even with a sugar-rich diet, a much broader spectrum of acidogenic microbes is found in dental plaque. While simple sugars can be cariogenic, cooked starches are also now recognised to be a caries threat, especially because such starches, while not sticky in the hand', can be highly retentive in the mouth. Metabolism of starch particles can yield a prolonged acidic challenge, especially at retentive, caries-prone sites. These changes in the paradigms of caries aetiology have important implications for caries control strategies. Preventing the transmission of S.mutans will likely be inadequate to prevent caries if a sufficiently carbohydrate-rich diet continues. Similarly, restriction of sucrose intake, although welcome, would be unlikely to be a panacea for caries, especially if frequent starch intake persisted. Instead, approaches to optimise fluoride delivery, to target plaque acidogenicity or acidogenic microbes, to promote plaque alkali generation, to increase salivary flow or replace fermentable carbohydrates with non-fermentable alternatives may be more promising.
引用
收藏
页码:64 / 72
页数:9
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