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. 2023 Feb 22;102(8):e33140.
doi: 10.1097/MD.0000000000033140.

The effects of smoking on genotoxic and histopathologic damage in exfoliated oral epithelial cells and the periodontium: A cross-sectional study

Affiliations

The effects of smoking on genotoxic and histopathologic damage in exfoliated oral epithelial cells and the periodontium: A cross-sectional study

Begum Alkan et al. Medicine (Baltimore). .

Abstract

Smoking negatively affects the prognosis of periodontal disease by impairing tissue healing. While micronucleus is the most popular parameter for demonstrating DNA damage, inflammatory cell and vascular densities are the most evaluated parameters for determining histopathologic changes in the periodontium. This study aimed to study the effects of periodontitis and cigarette smoking on genotoxic changes in exfoliated oral epithelial cells and histopathologic changes in periodontal tissue. A cross-sectional study was conducted between November 2018 and July 2019 at a dental university hospital in Turkey, and registered as NCT05484765. Eighty systemically healthy subjects were divided into four groups according to periodontal status and smoking habits: 20 smokers with generalized periodontitis (SGP), 20 nonsmokers with generalized periodontitis (NGP), 20 smokers with healthy periodontium (SHP), and 20 nonsmokers with healthy periodontium (NHP). For each study participant, full-mouth clinical periodontal parameters (CPPs) were measured, smear samples were taken from buccal and gingival mucosa, and periodontal tissue was biopsied from the maxillary molars. Cytogenetic and histopathologic assays (primary and secondary outcomes) were conducted using Feulgen reaction and hematoxylin-eosin staining, respectively. The mean CPPs of healthy periodontium groups were lower than generalized periodontitis groups. No significant differences were found between other groups regarding CPPs. Buccal micronuclei counts in groups decreased with the highest to lowest counts occurring in the order SGP > SHP > NGP > NHP. Gingival micronuclei counts in groups decreased from SGP > SHP > NGP = NHP. The most intense inflammatory cell and vascular densities occurred in SGP and NGP groups, respectively; and the mildest values were in healthy periodontium groups. Histopathological damage score decreased significantly by group in order SGP > NGP > SHP > NHP. The synergy arising from the combination of smoking and periodontitis exposures exacerbates genotoxic and histopathologic damage in oral cells and the periodontium.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors have no funding and conflicts of interest to disclose.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Flow diagram showing the study protocol.
Figure 2.
Figure 2.
Buccal mucosa smear samples from all groups: micronucleus (→). Photomicrographs of exfoliated epithelial cells belong to (A) smokers with generalized periodontitis, (B) nonsmokers with generalized periodontitis, (C) smokers with clinically healthy periodontium, and (D) nonsmokers with clinically healthy periodontium (Feulgen staining, 1000×).
Figure 3.
Figure 3.
Gingival mucosa smear samples from all groups: micronucleus (→). Photomicrographs of exfoliated epithelial cells belong to (A) smokers with generalized periodontitis, (B) nonsmokers with generalized periodontitis, (C) smokers with clinically healthy periodontium, and (D) nonsmokers with clinically healthy periodontium (Feulgen staining, 1000×).
Figure 4.
Figure 4.
Periodontal tissue samples from all groups: inflammatory cell density (→), and vascular density (▲). Photomicrographs of periodontal tissues belong to (A) smokers with generalized periodontitis, (B) nonsmokers with generalized periodontitis, (C) smokers with clinically healthy periodontium, and (D) nonsmokers with clinically healthy periodontium (Hematoxylin and eosin staining, 40×).

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