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A Clinical Review of the Connections Between Diabetes Mellitus, Periodontal Disease, and Cardiovascular Pathologies

Otilia Țica, Otilia Țica, Ioana Romanul, Gabriela Ciavoi, Vlad Alin Pantea, Ioana Scrobotă, Lucian Roman Șipoș, Cristian Marius Daina, Ovidiu Ţică, Ovidiu Ţică

2025Biomedicines8 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background: Diabetes mellitus (DM), periodontal disease (PD), and cardiovascular disease (CVD) are highly prevalent global health conditions with overlapping pathophysiological mechanisms. Emerging evidence suggests a bidirectional and synergistic relationship among them, driven by chronic inflammation, immune dysregulation, oxidative stress, and microbial dysbiosis. Objective: This review synthesizes current literature on the interconnectedness of DM, PD, and CVD, emphasizing shared molecular pathways, clinical implications, and opportunities for integrated management. Methods: A systematic review and narrative synthesis of recent clinical trials, observational studies, and multi-omics investigations was conducted to explore the mechanisms linking these three conditions. A structured literature search was performed across PubMed, Scopus, and Web of Science from database inception until 30 June 2025. Key findings were contextualized within systems biology, precision medicine, and real-world clinical strategies. Results: DM exacerbates periodontal inflammation and accelerates tissue destruction via hyperglycemia-induced inflammatory mediators, while periodontitis worsens glycemic control and insulin resistance. Both conditions independently elevate cardiovascular risk, and their co-occurrence significantly amplifies the incidence of adverse cardiovascular events. Shared biomarkers such as Interleukin (IL)-6, Tumor Necrosis Factor (TNF)-α, and CRP, as well as overlapping genetic and epigenetic signatures, underscore a common inflammatory axis. Periodontal therapy has demonstrated modest but meaningful benefits on glycemic control and endothelial function, while cardiometabolic therapies (e.g., statins, Glucagon-Like Peptide (GLP-1) receptor agonists, SGLT2 inhibitors) show potential to improve periodontal outcomes. Probiotics, microbiome-targeted therapies, and AI-based risk models are emerging as future tools. Conclusions: DM, PD, and CVD form a mutually reinforcing triad mediated by systemic inflammation and metabolic dysregulation. Integrated, multidisciplinary care models and precision health strategies are essential to address this inflammatory burden and improve long-term outcomes. Further large-scale interventional trials and mechanistic human studies are needed to establish causal links and optimize combined therapeutic approaches.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineGlycemicDiabetes mellitusDiseasePeriodontitisBioinformaticsInflammationIntensive care medicineBiomarkerImmune systemCritical appraisalType 2 diabetesInsulin resistanceObservational studySystemic inflammationEpigeneticsCancerInsulinInflammasomeType 2 Diabetes MellitusCochrane LibraryAdverse effectSystematic reviewRisk factorComplex diseaseReview articleNarrative reviewMechanism (biology)ImmunologyPathophysiologyPrecision medicineMetabolic control analysisChronic periodontitisProinflammatory cytokineTumor necrosis factor alphaOral microbiology and periodontitis researchDiabetes and associated disordersDental Health and Care Utilization
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