Neutrophil Defects as Risk Factors for Periodontal Diseases

J Periodontol. 1994 May:65 Suppl 5S:521-529. doi: 10.1902/jop.1994.65.5s.521.

Abstract

There are several hypotheses proposed for the etiologic mechanisms causing periodontal diseases. These include a paradigm in which all individuals are equally susceptible to one or several pathogenic bacteria; a second paradigm that holds that all bacteria are equally virulent and that host susceptibility determines onset of disease; or a combination of the above. In this review, we analyze the role of neutrophil dysfunction as a risk factor for the onset of periodontitis. Both intrinsic or genetically inherited abnormalities of neutrophils and acquired neutrophil abnormalities are considered. While a large body of data implicates neutrophil dysfunction, either intrinsic or acquired (bacterially or extrinsically induced), as a significant risk factor for the periodontal diseases, clear, prospective, longitudinal epidemiologic studies to evaluate this association remain to be performed. J Periodontol 1994; 65:521-529.

Keywords: Periodontitis/etiology; neutrophils; periodontitis/microbiology; risk factors.