Keywords
fermented lingonberry juice - caries - periodontitis - candidosis - antimicrobial
- inflammation
Introduction
Dental caries and periodontal disease, two major oral infections and inflammatory
diseases, affect most of the population.[1]
[2] In the past years, the concept that Streptococcus mutans (S. mutans) and Lactobacilli act as the keystone bacteria in caries development is under doubt, and recently a
more multispecies infectious etiology has received support,[3]
[4] although the issue is controversial.[5] The oral normal biofilm consists of hundreds of species[6] and, e.g., the subgingival plaque related to periodontal disease has been studied
to contain approximately five hundred bacterial species. The interaction of these
species with each other[7] and the host have been revealed piece by piece in caries,[8] and in periodontal disease,[9]
[10] and that Candida species may have role in these diseases.[11] The idea of using Lactobacilli in prevention of oral microbiome dysbiosis has been suggested.[12] Studies on multispecies, and even more importantly, in vivo human studies revealing these interactions are still quite scarce.
To prevent dental, gingival, and mucosal infections and inflammation, additional mouthwash
preparations of natural origin have been proposed. Lingonberries are low-bush wild
berries, which grow in the northern hemisphere and several in vitro studies have shown that their phenolic substances have anti-inflammatory,[13] antimicrobial,[14] and antioxidative effects.[15] Our previous studies with fermented lingonberry juice (FLJ) specially designed for
safe oral use[16] showed that it has beneficial oral antimicrobial and anti-inflammatory effects in
a 2-week in vivo human pilot study.[17] Active matrix metalloprotease-8 (aMMP-8) chair-side point-of-care mouthrinse test
has proven to be suitable to measure periodontal inflammation levels, and implemented
as a biomarker in the new staging- and grading-classification of periodontal disease.[18]
[19]
[20]
In this study, we aimed to evaluate the effects of 6 months use of FLJ on levels of
typical oral microbes (Candida, S. mutans, and Lactobacilli), and the in vivo effects on hypothesized prevention of caries, inflammation, and periodontal disease.
Materials and Methods
Twenty-five adults (aged between 28 and 91 years, mean age 64 years; M/F ratio was
10/15) were recruited randomly from private dental practices in Helsinki and Joensuu
(Finland). Patients were excluded if they were pregnant, had received antibiotic medications,
or if they had used chlorhexidine mouthwash during the study.
Standard oral examinations and sample gatherings were performed at the beginning of
the study, and after 6 months and 1 year. The patients were instructed not to eat,
drink, or brush teeth for 1 hour prior to the examinations. A saline rinse (10 mL
for 30 seconds) was collected to evaluate effects on oral S. mutans, Candida, and Lactobacilli levels, reflecting caries and candidosis risk. Second, a chairside mouthrinse test
was performed (PerioSafe, Dentognostics, Jena, Germany) according to the manufacturer's
instructions to measure matrix metalloprotease-8 (aMMP-8) levels, which reflect inflammation
and proteolytic periodontal destruction activity.[19]
[20]
[21] Dental decayed, missing, filled teeth (DMFT), decayed, missing, filled surfaces
(DMFS) and decayed surfaces (DS) indexes were calculated and probing pocket depths
(PPDs), bleeding on probing (BOP %) and visible plaque index (VPI) scale (0–3) were
recorded. Saline rinse samples were cultivated by serial dilutions on Mitis salivarius
(Merck, Darmstadt, Germany) bacitracin (0.2 U/mL) 20% saccharose, Sabouraud dextrose
(LabM, Bury, UK) and DeMan Rogosa and Sharpe (Merck, Darmstadt, Germany) agars, and
colony counts of S. mutans, Candida, and Lactobacilli were calculated. S. mutans counts were evaluated by light microscopy. CHROMagar Candida medium (CHROMagar, Paris, France) and latex agglutination test (Bichro-Dubli FumouzeR,
Fumouze Diagnostics, Levallois-Perret, France) were used to identify Candida species. Scaling and root planning were performed after each sampling and oral examination
time point. The participants used 10 mL of FLJ[16] (Lingora®, Vantaa, Finland) as a mouthwash for 30 second daily in addition to their
normal oral homecare routines. FLJ is all natural, pasteurized, and manufactured by
a patented method and contains no excipients. Naturally occurring sugars in lingonberry
juice are reduced to 3g/100 mL and its polyphenol concentration is 212 mg/100 mL.
Thus, the antimicrobial and anti-inflammatory effects are induced solely by the specific
composition achieved by the fermentation process of lingonberry juice.
The study was conducted in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki and approved
by the Institutional Review Board (or Ethics Committee) of Stockholm Community, Sweden
(2016–08–24/2016/1:8 and 2016–1-24) and the Helsinki University Central Hospital,
Finland (360/13/03/00/13 and 51/13/02/2009). Informed consent was obtained from all
subjects involved in the study.
Statistical analyses were performed with non-parametric Friedman's test and pairwise
post-hoc analysis with Dunn-Bonferroni test (SPSS, version 27; IBM, Armonk, NY, United
States), and p < 0.05 was considered as statistically significant. Initial correlations between
the variables were calculated with Spearman's and the effects of FLJ mouthrinse with
the repeated measures correlation (the rmcorr package, version 0.4.1 in R statistical
software version 3.6.3).[22]
Results
A total of 21 of the 25 recruited participants used the mouthwash according to instructions
(10 mL/once a day) and were included in the analyses. One patient used 5 mL/once a
day, two used 10 mL irregularly, and one used 20 mL/once a day. Diseases, medications,
and smoking habits are shown in [Table 1]. Analysis of the microbial cultivations revealed that most of the patients' yeast
species (23/25) were identified as Candida albicans, only two as C. dubliniensis. Four patients had a mixed C. albicans/non-C. albicans (nd) growth.
Table 1
Patient characteristics (n = 21)
Age (mean ± standard deviation)
|
65.29 ± 16.23 years
|
Sex (female/ male, %)
|
61.9/38.1%
|
Smoking (yes %)
|
19.0%
|
Diseases (mean, range)
8. Medications (mean, range)
|
1.76, 0–4
2.95, 0–9
|
Medications causing xerostomia (mean, range)
|
1.33, 0–4
|
The effects of FLJ on the 11 parameters studied are shown in [Fig. 1]. During the FLJ mouthwash period, there was a significant difference between at
least two measurement points in the levels of VPI, BOP, aMMP-8, DMFT, DMFS, DS, Candida, S. mutans, and Lactobacilli (p < 0.05). VPI ([Fig. 1A]), BOP ([Fig. 1B]), DS ([Fig. 1H]) Candida ([Fig. 1I]), and S. mutans ([Fig. 1J]) decreased significantly and Lactobacilli ([Fig. 1K]) increased significantly between 0 and 6 months (p = 0.001, p = 0.033, p = 0.033, p = 0.002, p = 0.021, respectively). Furthermore, S. mutans ([Fig. 1J]) increased significantly between 6 and 12 months and Lactobacilli ([Fig. 1K]) increased significantly between 0 and 12 months (p = 0.006 and p < 0.001, respectively). Finally, both aMMP-8 ([Fig. 1C]) and BOP ([Fig. 1B]) levels were smaller at 12 months compared with the beginning of FLJ (0 months),
but the difference did not reach statistical significance. There were no significant
differences in PD more than or equal to 4mm ([Fig. 1D]) and PD more than or equal to 6 mm ([Fig. 1E]).
Fig. 1 Boxplots of variables included in this study. Time points of recordings (0, 6 months,
1 year) are marked with separate colors on the x-axis. (A) Visible plaque index (VPI); (B) bleeding on probing (BOP); (C) active matrix metalloprotease (aMMP-8); (D) periodontal probing depth (PD) more than or equal to 4mm; (E) periodontal probing depth (PD) more than or equal to 6mm; (F) decayed, missing, filled teeth (DMFT); (G) decayed, missing, filled surfaces (DMFS); (H) decayed surfaces (DS); (I) Candida counts; (J) Streptococcus mutans counts; (K) lactobacilli counts. Microbial counts are reported as colony forming units/mL on
the vertical axis. p-Values are indicated as bars above the boxplots, p < 0.05 was considered significant.
Statistically significant (p < 0.05) positive correlations at the beginning of the study were found between VPI
versus BOP (rho = 0.700), VPI versus PD ≥ 6mm (rho = 0.491), VPI vs S. mutans (rho = 0.423), BOP vs PD≥ 6mm (rho = 0.418), aMMP-8 versus Candida counts (rho = 0.502), aMMP-8 vs Lactobacilli counts (rho = 0.397), DMFT versus DMFS (rho = 0.818), PD≥ 4 versus PD ≥ 6mm (rho = 0.461),
PD ≥ 6mm versus Candida counts (rho = 0.413), Candida versus Lactobacilli counts (rho = 0.570), and S. mutans versus Lactobacilli counts (rho = 0.399). During the FLJ mouthwash period, significant repeated measures
correlations (p < 0.05) were found between Candida counts versus DS (rmcorr = 0.572), Lactobacilli counts versus VPI (rmcorr = -0.380), and BOP versus VPI (rmcorr = 0.383). Importantly,
nearly significant correlations were found between Lactobacilli versus DMFT (rmcorr = 0.241; p = 0.120), Lactobacilli counts versus BOP (rmcorr = -0.291, p = 0.058), and Lactobacilli versus Candida (rmcorr = 0.287; p = 0.062).
Discussion
The search for the pathogen(s) causing caries has been ongoing for decades and most
studies indicate that this multifactorial disease incidence increases due to high
carbohydrate diet frequency and the presence of acidogenic microbes (not necessarily
S. mutans), failing of salivary protective properties, vulnerable tooth anatomy, or insufficient
manual cleaning of the teeth, resulting in enamel and dentin decay. The main aim is
to prevent disease initiation and eventual progress by aiding host defensive mechanisms.
The protection of teeth with fluoride has been the most effective established preventive
measure against caries. In symbiotic conditions, microbial balance is maintained by
host–microbial and microbial–microbial interactions, and even opportunistic pathogens
exist side by side. When this balance is disturbed depending on, for example, host
immune deficiencies, local excess of carbohydrates, mechanical trauma, or deepened
gingival probing depths, increased anaerobic conditions create optimal environments
for the dysbiotic and opportunistic pathogen proliferation or activation of specific
destructive enzymatic production and cascades.[4]
[20]
[23]
[24]
[25] The basic building blocks of dentin and periodontium are proteins, and collagens
are found in both structures. Minute protein structural difference and the specificity
of each microbial proteolytic enzyme may be the determinant by which species will
flourish. Several oral microbes, such as Candida, S. mutans, and Porphyromonas gingivalis, possess collagenolytic or basement membrane degrading proteolytic enzymes or have
proteins that interact with the host to enhance adhesion and subsequent invasion.[26] On the species level, it is about survival of the fittest, a continuous race for
nutrients, living space and beat the host defense mechanisms. According to the current
understanding, a symbiotic oral microbiota to maintain or restore oral health is prevalent.[27]
In this study, FLJ juice caused statistically significant reductions in Candida and S. mutans levels, and Candida levels remained at a lower level at the 1-year time point. Also, caries incidence
(DS) decreased significantly during the mouthwash period and slowly reverted to near
study onset level. May Candida yeasts play a more pivotal role in caries? They are also acidogenic and some evidence
points to that direction.[28] The caries indexes DMFT/DMFS/DS gave a dissimilar picture of the caries incidence.
This is due to the fact that secondary caries findings are concealed if they occur
on the same tooth surface as missing or filled surfaces; the same surface is counted
only once. Therefore, the authors state that DS gives a more accurate picture of caries
incidence. High S. mutans levels have also been found to be coassociated with severe untreated periodontitis.[29]
Lactobacilli counts rose significantly in this study during the FLJ period. Lactobacilli are associated and found from carious lesions, and they are acidogenic, but according
to this study, no significant correlation was found with caries incidence (DS) and
surprisingly, negative correlation with VPI. Lactobacilli has not shown significant upregulation of gene expressions of collagenolytic enzymes
in root caries.[30] The advantage in increasing the patient's own Lactobacilli counts is that the effect remained even after the washout period, compared with commercial
probiotic Lactobacilli preparations whose colonization is only very short-term. Lactobacilli are proposed to inhibit Candida by competing with niches and adhesion, production of lactic or organic acids, inhibiting
inflammation or altering gene expression,[31] and may be beneficial in chemotherapy-related mucositis.[32]
Candida and streptococci may have mutualistic interactions in the oral cavity increasing
binding or increase drug resistance, as opposed to antagonistic effects of Lactobacilli against Candida.[7]
BOP and VPI decreased significantly by FLJ. At the same time, aMMP-8 levels were decreasing
that may be indicative of diminished inflammatory and tissue destructive proteolytic
burden. The basic metabolism of gingival tissue is based on continuous tissue component
remodeling of proteins, but excessive proteolytic and collagenolytic inflammation
eventually may cause irreversible tissue damage. Candida yeasts have been proven to be gelatinolytic and Candida glabrata cell wall proteases are able to convert pro-MMP-8 to its active forms in vitro, and this activation was inhibited by FLJ.[21] The chair-side point-of-care aMMP-8 test is a valuable tool to diagnose and follow
treatment efficacy and is more precise than BOP in staging and grading of periodontal
disease.[19]
[20] As the key pathogens in periodontitis are not known, scaling and root planning and
oral homecare instructing have been the best treatment options. Additional chlorhexidine
is applied as adjunctive therapy in difficult cases. Chlorhexidine is a broad-spectrum
antiseptic but has multiple side effects and cannot be used for prolonged periods,[33] and there is inconclusive evidence of its effect on lowering S. mutans levels.[34]
[35] By contrast FLJ does not inhibit the growth of Lactobacilli in vitro or in vivo, and none of the participants in the current and previous studies[16]
[17] reported any side effects. Lingonberries are known to have antimicrobial, anti-inflammatory,
and antioxidant effects.[36] Clinical human trials have shown beneficial effects of FLJ on salivary parameters
and reducing xerostomia,[37] and potential inhibition of plaque levels, bleeding on probing, and inflammation
in dental implants.[38]
Conclusions
This is the first in vivo prospective study to our knowledge of the effects of lingonberries in the oral environment.
FLJ seems to offer a safe addition to oral homecare, potentially decreasing visible
plaque, BOP, Candida, and S. mutans levels, caries risk as well as periodontal low-grade inflammation and proteolytic
tissue destructive aMMP-8 burden in vivo without side effects. The search for identifying culprit microbes causing these diseases
is still the ultimate target, and further randomized double-blinded placebo-controlled
in vivo studies are required to verify these results.