4.5 Article

Melatonin improves periodontitis-induced kidney damages by decreasing inflammatory stress and apoptosis in rats

Journal

JOURNAL OF PERIODONTOLOGY
Volume 92, Issue 6, Pages 22-34

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/JPER.20-0434

Keywords

experimental periodontitis; kidney; matrix metalloproteinase(s); melatonin; oxidative stress; periodontal‐ systemic disease interactions

Funding

  1. Scientific Research Fund of Recep Tayyip Erdogan University [Bap-TSA-2018-904]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study found that melatonin can effectively restrict the inflammation, cell apoptosis, and tissue structural damage induced by periodontitis. The group treated with melatonin had less periodontal bone loss and kidney damage compared to the periodontitis group. However, the therapeutic effect of melatonin on renal function was limited.
Background Two main aims of this animal study were to inspect the possible effects of periodontitis on the structure and functions of the kidneys and the therapeutic effectiveness of melatonin. Methods Twenty-four male Sprague-Dawley rats were randomly divided into three groups: control, experimental periodontitis (Ep), and Ep-melatonin (Ep-Mel). Periodontitis was induced by placing 3.0-silk sutures sub-paramarginally around the cervix of right-left mandibular first molars and maintaining the sutures for 5 weeks. Then melatonin (10 mg/kg body weight/day, 14 days), and the vehicle was administered intraperitonally. Mandibular and kidney tissue samples were obtained following the euthanasia. Periodontal bone loss was measured via histological and microcomputed tomographic slices. On right kidney histopathological and immunohistochemical, and on the left kidney biochemical (malonyl-aldehyde [MDA], glutathione, oxidative stress [OSI], tumor necrosis factor [TNF]-alpha, interleukin [IL]-1 beta, matrix metalloproteinase [MMP]-8, MMP-9, and cathepsin D levels) evaluations were performed. Renal functional status was analyzed by levels of serum creatinine, urea, cystatin-C, and urea creatinine. Results Melatonin significantly restricted ligature-induced periodontal bone loss (P <0 .01) and suppressed the levels of proinflammatory cytokines (TNF-alpha and IL-1 beta), oxidative stress (MDA and OSI), and proteases (MMP-8, MMP-9, and CtD) that was significantly higher in the kidneys of the rats with periodontitis (P <0.05). In addition, periodontitis-related histological damages and apoptotic activity were also significantly lower in the Ep-Mel group (P <0.05). However, the markers of renal function of the Ep group were detected slightly impaired in comparison with the control group (P >0.05); and the therapeutic activity of melatonin was limited (P >0.05). Conclusion Melatonin restricts the periodontitis-induced inflammatory stress, apoptosis, and structural but not functional impairments.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available