Title of article
The Role Inflammation In Dental Caries Repair
Author/Authors
Farshbaf Antic ، Mahsa Department of Operative Dentistry - Faculty of Dentistry - Tabriz University of Medical Sciences
From page
69
To page
73
Abstract
Dental caries is being considered as the most common noncommunicable disease worldwide. It is being defined as sugar-driven, biofilm mediated and dynamic disorder which causes remineralization and demineralization of teeth hard tissues involving inflammatory system. It has been shown that IL-6, IL-8 and TNF-a was signifncatly increased in saliva of patients with dental caries. A cascade of four steps is required to repair dental pulp by direct capping with calcium hydroxide or by implanting bioactive extracellular matrix molecules: moderate inflammation, commitment of adult reserve stem cells, proliferation, and differentiation of these cells. Osteoblast/odontoblast-like differentiation and expression of mineralization-related ECM molecules may also be promoted by mild inflammation of antigen-presenting dendritic cells. Studies in humans and in vitro indicate that dentin barrier formation occurs only when pulp inflammation and infection are minimized, allowing for tissue homeostasis to return. To ensure the sustainability of dental treatments, promoting the resolution of pulp inflammation may be a valuable therapeutic opportunity. We have reviewed the role inflammation in caries repair in this study.
Keywords
Inflammatory , Cytokines , Dental
Journal title
International Journal Of Medical Investigation
Journal title
International Journal Of Medical Investigation
Record number
2737299
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