Article Data

  • Views 870
  • Dowloads 197

Original Research

Open Access

Salivary Factors Related to Caries in Children with Autism

  • Morales-Chávez MC1
  • Villarroel-Dorrego M2
  • Salas V3

1Pediatric Dentistry Department, Universidad Central de Venezuela

2Oral Pathology Department, Universidad Central de Venezuela

3Biology Department, Universidad Central de Venezuela

DOI: 10.17796/1053-4625-43.1.5 Vol.43,Issue 1,January 2019 pp.22-26

Published: 01 January 2019

*Corresponding Author(s): Morales-Chávez MC E-mail: macamocha@hotmail.com

Abstract

Many predisposing factors to caries are present in autism, however, it is unlikely that autistic patients exhibit higher caries indexes than the rest of the population. Objective: To evaluate salivary factors related to caries in autistic patients. Study design: 34 autistics and 34 controls aged between 4–13 years old were included. Decayed, missing, and filled teeth (DMFT) index and oral hygiene simplified index (IHO-S) were assessed, as well as, pH, total proteins, phosphate, calcium and IgA in saliva. All data were analyzed by chi2 and Student t tests for independent samples. P values<0.05 were considered statistically significant. Results: Autistic patients showed less caries than controls (p≤0.001), DMFT was 1±1 and 3±2 respectively (p≤0.001). In relation to IHO-S, values increased (p=0.008) in autistic patients (2.25±0.78) compared to controls (1.79±0.59), however Salivary ph means were similar (7.20±0.48 and 7.27±0.34 respectively). Decreased calcium levels (p=0.013) were observed in autistics (0.621±0.35 mmol/L) compared to controls (0.89±0.51 mmol/L), but phosphate levels were similar (6.17±4.22 M, 5.51±4.86 M respectively). When total proteins of saliva were assessed, autistics showed a slight increment (2.65±1.81 mg/mL) compared to controls (2.24±1.27 mg/mL) and zymography showed a higher proteolytic activity in autistic children. Finally, IgA concentration reached 116.55±90.97 μg/mL in autistics and 161.61 ± 193.37μg/mL (p=0.527) in the control group. Conclusions: Even though patients with autism exhibited a poorer oral hygiene, caries indexes were lower, calcium levels in saliva were found to be lesser and phosphate levels higher.


Keywords

Autism; Saliva; Caries; Children

Cite and Share

Morales-Chávez MC,Villarroel-Dorrego M,Salas V. Salivary Factors Related to Caries in Children with Autism. Journal of Clinical Pediatric Dentistry. 2019. 43(1);22-26.

References

1. Kanner, L. Autistic disturbances of affective contact. Nervous child 2(3): 217- 250, 1943.

2. Landrigan P. What cause autism? Exploring the environmental contribution. Curr Opin Pediatr 22:1-7, 2010.

3. Visser JC, Rommelse NNJ, Lappenschaar M, Servatius-Oosterling IJ, Greven CU, Buitelaar JK. Variation in the Early Trajectories of Autism Symptoms Is Related to the Development of Language, Cognition, and Behavior Problems. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 56(8):659-668, 2017

4. Coury D. medical treatment of Autistic Spectrum Disorders. Curr Opin Neurology 23: 1-6, 2010.

5. Levy SE, Hyman SL. Use of complementary and alternative treatments for children with autistic spectrum disorders is increasing. Pediatr Ann 32(10):685-91, 2003.

6. Cekici H, Sanlier N. Current nutritional approaches in managing autism spectrum disorder: A review. Nutr Neurosci 1:1-11, 2017.

7. Piwowarczyk A, Horvath A, Łukasik J, Pisula E, Szajewska H. Glutenand casein-free diet and autism spectrum disorders in children: a system-atic review. Eur J Nutr 1-8, 2017.

8. DeMattei R, Cuvo A, Maurizio S. Oral caries assessment of children with Autism Spectrum Disorder. J Dent Hyg 81(3): 1-11, 2007.

9. Rai K, Hegde AM, Jose N. Salivary antioxidants and oral health in children with autism. Arch Oral Biol 57(8): 1116-20, 2012.

10. Pakhomov GN. The World Health Organisation’s Oral Health Programme (ORH). FDI World 5(3):22–23, 1996.

11. Greene JC, Vermillion JR. The simplified oral hygiene index. J Am Dent Assoc 68:7–13, 1964.

12. Connerty, H. V y Briggs, AR. Determination of serum calcium by means of ortho-cresolphthalein complexone. Am J Clin Pathol 45: 290-6, 1966.

13. Fiske, CH, Subbarow Y. The colorimetric determination of phosphorus. J. Biol. Chem 66: 375-400, 1925.

14. Lowry, O.H., Rosebrough, N.J., Farr, A.L. y Randall, R.J. Protein measurement with the folin phenol reagent. J. Biol. Chem 193:265-275, 1951.

15. Laemmli UK. Cleavage of structural proteins during the assembly of the head of bacteriophage T4. Nature 227 (5259): 680–685, 1970.

16. Snoek PA, Von den Hoff JW. Zymographic techniques for the analysis of matrix metalloproteinases and their inhibitors. BioTechniques 38:73-83, 2005.

17. Ortiz D, Afonso C, Hagel I, Rodriguez O, Ortiz C, Palenque M, Lynch NR. Influencia de las infecciones helmínticas y el estado nutricional en la respuesta inmunitaria de niños venezolanos. Rev Panam Salud Pública 8(3): 156-163, 2000.

18. Namal, N., Vehit, H. E., & Koksal, S. Do autistic children have higher levels of caries? A cross-sectional study in Turkish children. J Indian Soc Pedod Prev Dent. 25(2), 97, 2007.

19. Vajawat M, Deepika PC. Comparative evaluation of oral hygiene practices and oral health status in autistic and normal individuals. J Int Soc Prev Community Dent 2(2):58-63, 2012.

20. Marshall J, Sheller B, Mancl L. Caries-risk assessment and caries status of children with autism. Pediatr Dent 32(1):69-75, 2010.

21. Al-Maweri SA, Halboub ES, Al-Soneidar WA, Al-Sufyani GA. Oral lesions and dental status of autistic children in Yemen: A case–control study. J Int Soc Prev Community Dent 4(Suppl 3), S199, 2014.

22. Bassoukou IH, Nicolau J, Dos Santos MT. Saliva flow rate, buffer capacity, and pH of autistic individuals. Clin Oral Invest 13: 23-7, 2009.

23. Tulunoglu O, Demirtas S, Tulunoglu I. Total antioxidant levels of saliva in children related to caries, age, and gender. Int J Paediatr Dent.16(3):186-91, 2006

24. Johansson I, Ericcson T, Bowen W, Cole M. The effect of malnutrition on caries development and saliva composition in the rat. J Dent Res 64(1):37-43, 1985.

25. Tayab T, Rai K, Kumari AV. Evaluating the physicochemical properties and inorganic elements of saliva in caries-free and caries-active children. An in vivo study. EurJ Paediatr Dent. 13(2):107-12, 2012.

26. Abou Neel EA, Aljabo A, Strange A, et al. Demineralization–remineralization dynamics in teeth and bone. Int J Nanomedicine 11:4743-4763, 2016.

27. Vijayashankar S, Doss U, Malarveni Damodaran Lp, Arumugam G, Sridharan S. Analysis of Salivary Components to evaluate the Pathogenesis of Autism in Children. Asian J Pharm Clin Res 7(4): 205-11, 2014.

28. Limoli DH, Jones CJ, Wozniak DJ. Bacterial Extracellular Polysaccharides in Biofilm Formation and Function. Microbiol spectr 3(3):10.1128, 2015.

29. Díaz Caballero AJ, Mendez Cuadro D, Martinez Serrano ER, Orozco Páez J, Velásquez Martínez MR. Metaloproteinasas de la matriz en Odontología y sus consideraciones desde el campo de la química computacional. Rev Cubana Estomatol 51(1):1-5, 2014.

30. Spiroski M. Immunological and Immunogenetic Changes in Children with Autistic Disorder in Republic of Macedonia. SEE J Immunol. 2015(20003):1-8, 2015.

31. Doifode D, Damle SG. Comparison of salivary IgA levels in caries free and caries active children. IJCDS 2(1):10-14, 2011.

32. Chawda, J. G., Chaduvula, N., Patel, H. R., Jain, S. S., & Lala, A. K. Salivary SIgA and dental caries activity. Indian Pediatr 48(9), 719-721, 2011.

Abstracted / indexed in

Science Citation Index Expanded (SciSearch) Created as SCI in 1964, Science Citation Index Expanded now indexes over 9,500 of the world’s most impactful journals across 178 scientific disciplines. More than 53 million records and 1.18 billion cited references date back from 1900 to present.

Biological Abstracts Easily discover critical journal coverage of the life sciences with Biological Abstracts, produced by the Web of Science Group, with topics ranging from botany to microbiology to pharmacology. Including BIOSIS indexing and MeSH terms, specialized indexing in Biological Abstracts helps you to discover more accurate, context-sensitive results.

Google Scholar Google Scholar is a freely accessible web search engine that indexes the full text or metadata of scholarly literature across an array of publishing formats and disciplines.

JournalSeek Genamics JournalSeek is the largest completely categorized database of freely available journal information available on the internet. The database presently contains 39226 titles. Journal information includes the description (aims and scope), journal abbreviation, journal homepage link, subject category and ISSN.

Current Contents - Clinical Medicine Current Contents - Clinical Medicine provides easy access to complete tables of contents, abstracts, bibliographic information and all other significant items in recently published issues from over 1,000 leading journals in clinical medicine.

BIOSIS Previews BIOSIS Previews is an English-language, bibliographic database service, with abstracts and citation indexing. It is part of Clarivate Analytics Web of Science suite. BIOSIS Previews indexes data from 1926 to the present.

Journal Citation Reports/Science Edition Journal Citation Reports/Science Edition aims to evaluate a journal’s value from multiple perspectives including the journal impact factor, descriptive data about a journal’s open access content as well as contributing authors, and provide readers a transparent and publisher-neutral data & statistics information about the journal.

Scopus: CiteScore 2.0 (2022) Scopus is Elsevier's abstract and citation database launched in 2004. Scopus covers nearly 36,377 titles (22,794 active titles and 13,583 Inactive titles) from approximately 11,678 publishers, of which 34,346 are peer-reviewed journals in top-level subject fields: life sciences, social sciences, physical sciences and health sciences.

Submission Turnaround Time

Conferences

Top