Bacteria that cause periodontitis are transmitted from
parents to children
Keywords:
Periodontitis,
in,
children, Time:28-04-2021
Adults with periodontitis transmit bacteria that can cause the disease in future to their
children, and the bacteria remain in the oral cavity even when the children undergo treatment of
various kinds, reinforcing the need for preventive care in the first year of a baby's life.
This is the main conclusion of a study conducted at the University of Campinas (UNICAMP) in the
state of São Paulo, Brazil. An article on the study is published in Scientific
Reports.
Periodontitis is an inflammation of the periodontium, the tissue that supports the teeth and
maintains them in the maxillary and mandibular bones. The disease is triggered by bacterial
infection. Symptoms include bleeding of the gums and halitosis. In severe cases, it leads to
bone and tooth loss. If the bacteria or other microorganisms that cause the disease enter the
bloodstream, they may trigger other kinds of inflammation in the body. Treatment includes
cleaning of the pockets around teeth by a dentist or hygienist and administration of
anti-inflammatory drugs or antibiotics.
"The parents' oral microbiome is a determinant of the subgingival microbial
colonization of their children," the article's authors state in their conclusions,
adding that "dysbiotic microbiota acquired by children of periodontitis patients at an
early age are resilient to shift and the community structure is maintained even after
controlling the hygiene status."
According to dental surgeon Mabelle de Freitas Monteiro, first author of the article, she and
her group have been researching periodontitis for 10 years, observing parents with the disease
and its impact on their children's health.
"If the findings are applied to day-to-day dental practice, the study can be said to help
design more direct approaches. Knowing that periodontal disease may affect the patient's
family is an incentive to use preventive treatment, seek early diagnosis and mitigate
complications," said Monteiro, who was supported by FAPESP via two projects (16/03704-7 and
16/19970-8).
The principal investigator for both projects was Renato Corrêa Viana Casarin, a professor
at UNICAMP's Piracicaba Dental School (FOP) and last author of the article.
For Casarin, parents should start caring for the health of their children's gums when they
are infants. "This pioneering study compares parents with and without periodontitis. In
children of the former, we found subgingival bacterial colonization at a very early age.
However, 'inheriting' the problem doesn't mean a child is fated to develop the
disease in adulthood. Hence the importance of keeping an eye open for the smallest signs and
seeking specialized help," Casarin said.
Data on the Brazilian population's oral health is scarce. According to the last national
dental epidemiological survey, conducted by the Ministry of Health in 2010, 18% of children aged
12 had never been to the dentist and 11.7% had experienced bleeding of the gums. In the 15-19
age group, 13.6% had never visited a dental clinic. Another survey was scheduled for 2020 but
had to be postponed because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The São Paulo State Department of Health published the findings of its latest oral health
survey in 2019, showing among other things that 50.5% of adults aged 35-44 complained of
toothache, bleeding gums and periodontitis.
Bacteria
In the FOP-UNICAMP study led by Casarin and Monteiro, samples of subgingival biofilm and plaque
were collected from 18 adults with a history of generalized aggressive (grade C) periodontitis,
their children aged 6-12, and 18 orally healthy adults.
In addition to a clinical analysis, the samples were also subjected to a microbiological
analysis and genetic sequencing by researchers at Ohio State University in the United States
under the supervision of Professor Purnima Kumar.
"Children of periodontitis parents were preferentially colonized by Filifactor alocis,
Porphyromonas gingivalis, Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans, Streptococcus parasanguinis,
Fusobacterium nucleatum and several species belonging to the genus Selenomonas even in the
absence of periodontitis," the article states. "These pathogens also emerged as robust
discriminators of the microbial signatures of children of parents with
periodontitis."
Casarin told Agência FAPESP that despite bacterial plaque control and vigorous brushing
the children of people with the disease still had the bacteria in their mouths, whereas the
effects of dental hygiene and prophylaxis were more significant in the children of healthy
subjects.
"Because the parents had periodontitis, their children assumed this community with disease
characteristics. They carried the bacterial information into their adult lives," he said,
adding that the analysis of bacterial colonization pointed to a greater likelihood of
transmission by the mother. The research group will now work with pregnant women in an effort to
"break the cycle" by preventing bacterial colonization of their children's
mouths.
"We'll treat the mothers during pregnancy, before the babies are born, and try to find
out if it's possible to prevent bacterial colonization from occurring," Casarin said,
noting that studies with patients will proceed only when control of the pandemic permits.