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Cellular Mechanisms of Inflammaging and Periodontal Disease

Daniel Clark, Allan Radaic, Yvonne L. Kapila

2022Frontiers in Dental Medicine22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Increased age is associated with an increased prevalence of chronic inflammatory diseases and conditions. The term inflammaging has been used to describe the age-related changes to the immune response that results in a chronic and elevated inflammatory state that contributes, in part, to the increased prevalence of disease in older adults. Periodontal disease is a chronic inflammatory condition that affects the periodontium and increases in prevalence with age. To better understand the mechanisms that drive inflammaging, a broad body of research has focused on the pathological age-related changes to key cellular regulators of the immune response. This review will focus on our current understanding of how certain immune cells (neutrophils, macrophages, T cells) change with age and how such changes contribute to inflammaging and more specifically to periodontal disease.

Topics & Concepts

PeriodontiumImmune systemDiseasePathologicalPeriodontal diseaseMedicineImmunologyInflammatory responseInflammationChronic diseasePathologyInternal medicineDentistryOral microbiology and periodontitis researchImmune Response and InflammationImmune cells in cancer
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