Kaidonis John, Townsend Grant
School of Dentistry, The University of Adelaide, 5005 Australia.
School of Dentistry, The University of Adelaide, 5005 Australia.
Ann Anat. 2016 Jan;203:85-9. doi: 10.1016/j.aanat.2015.02.002. Epub 2015 Feb 24.
Biofilms are naturally found in all wet environments including the oral structures of nearly all species. Human oral biofilms have existed since our earliest ancestors and have evolved symbiotically with the dentition over many millennia within a Palaeolithic, hunter-gatherer setting. Irrespective of the plant-animal ratio, it can be argued that the Palaeolithic diet was essentially acidic, and acted as a selective force for much of the evolution of the stomatognathic system. The relationship between saliva, biofilm and teeth, the 'sialo-microbial-dental complex', provides oral health benefits and offers a different perspective to the old dental paradigm that only associated oral biofilms (plaque) with disease (caries). This new paradigm emphasises that oral biofilms are essential for the 'mineral maintenance' of teeth. Oral biofilms provide physical protection from dietary acid and together with bacterial metabolic acids cause the resting pH of the biofilm to fall below neutral. This is then followed by the re-establishment of a neutral environment by chemical interactions mediated by the saliva within the biofilm. Such pH fluctuations are often responsible for the cyclic demineralisation, then remineralisation of teeth, a process necessary for tooth maturation. However, since the advent of farming and especially since the industrial revolution, the increase in consumption of carbohydrates, refined sugars and acidic drinks has changed the ecology of biofilms. Biofilm biodiversity is significantly reduced together with a proliferation of acidogenic and aciduric organisms, tipping the balance of the 'demin-remin' cycle towards net mineral loss and hence caries. In addition, the consumption of acidic drinks in today's societies has removed the protective nature of the biofilm, leading to erosion. Erosion and caries are 'modern-day' diseases and reflect an imbalance within the oral biofilm resulting in the demineralisation of teeth.
生物膜天然存在于所有潮湿环境中,包括几乎所有物种的口腔结构。自人类最早的祖先以来,人类口腔生物膜就已存在,并在旧石器时代狩猎采集的环境中与牙列共生进化了数千年。无论动植物比例如何,可以说旧石器时代的饮食本质上是酸性的,并且在口颌系统的大部分进化过程中起到了选择作用。唾液、生物膜和牙齿之间的关系,即“唾液-微生物-牙齿复合体”,对口腔健康有益,并为仅将口腔生物膜(牙菌斑)与疾病(龋齿)联系起来的旧牙科学范式提供了不同的视角。这种新范式强调口腔生物膜对牙齿的“矿物质维持”至关重要。口腔生物膜提供了抵御饮食酸的物理保护,并且与细菌代谢酸一起导致生物膜的静息pH值降至中性以下。随后,通过生物膜内唾液介导的化学相互作用重新建立中性环境。这种pH值波动通常是牙齿周期性脱矿然后再矿化的原因,这是牙齿成熟所必需的过程。然而,自农业出现以来,尤其是自工业革命以来,碳水化合物、精制糖和酸性饮料消费的增加改变了生物膜的生态。生物膜的生物多样性显著降低,产酸和耐酸生物大量繁殖,使“脱矿-再矿化”循环的平衡向净矿物质流失和龋齿倾斜。此外,当今社会酸性饮料的消费消除了生物膜的保护性质,导致牙齿侵蚀。侵蚀和龋齿是“现代”疾病,反映了口腔生物膜内的失衡,导致牙齿脱矿。