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Brief Report:
Keyes triad in type 2 diabetes mellitus: A microbiological study
Jochima Eudora Cota, Anita Dhupar, Anita Spadigam, Karla Carvalho
Adv Biomed Res
2021, 10:36 (26 November 2021)
DOI
:10.4103/abr.abr_160_20
Background:
With the increasing prevalence of type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM), there is a need to assess if the elevated salivary glucose levels provide an environment conducive to the growth of cariogenic microorganisms specifically
Streptocooccus mutans
and
Lactobacillus acidophilus.
Materials and Methods:
Forty-five patients were divided into three groups consisting of patients with type 2 DM with caries, patients with type 2 DM without caries and age-matched healthy nondiabetic individuals (control). Saliva samples were subjected to semiautomatic salivary glucose estimation by the glucose oxidase-peroxidase method, using the Tulip glucose estimation kit. Swabs were immediately inoculated onto Mitis Salivarius Bacitracin agar and Man Rogosa Sharpe agar.
Results:
In Group A, statistically significant positive correlation was found between
S. mutans
and salivary glucose (
r
= 0.858) as well as
L. acidophilus
and salivary glucose (
r
= 0.853). In Group B, a statistically significant positive correlation was found only between
S. mutans
and salivary glucose (
r
= 0.705) and not between
L. acidophilus
and salivary glucose (
r
= 0.387). The control group did not show a statistically significant correlation.
Conclusion:
It is established that salivary glucose levels reflect the diabetic state of an individual. The salivary glucose level predicted a 1.7 times higher caries susceptibility in a diabetic, as shown by results in this study. Salivary glucose causes an increase in the cariogenic load in diabetic patients, thus warranting a modification of the Keyes triad.
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