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Vascular Changes and Hypoxia in Periodontal Disease as a Link to Systemic Complications

Dilek Tiyekli Çelik, Alpdoğan Kantarcı

2021Pathogens57 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The hypoxic microenvironment caused by oral pathogens is the most important cause of the disruption of dynamic hemostasis between the oral microbiome and the immune system. Periodontal infection exacerbates the inflammatory response with increased hypoxia and causes vascular changes. The chronicity of inflammation becomes systemic as a link between oral and systemic diseases. The vascular network plays a central role in controlling infection and regulating the immune response. In this review, we focus on the local and systemic vascular network change mechanisms of periodontal inflammation and the pathological processes of inflammatory diseases. Understanding how the vascular network influences the pathology of periodontal diseases and the systemic complication associated with this pathology is essential for the discovery of both local and systemic proactive control mechanisms.

Topics & Concepts

Systemic inflammationInflammationHypoxia (environmental)Immune systemMedicineHemostasisPathologicalImmunologySystemic diseaseDiseasePeriodontitisPathologyInternal medicineOxygenOrganic chemistryChemistryOral microbiology and periodontitis researchOral Health Pathology and TreatmentInflammatory mediators and NSAID effects
Vascular Changes and Hypoxia in Periodontal Disease as a Link to Systemic Complications | Litcius