Hyposalivation in patients with psoriasis: Association with severity, inflammatory, and anti‐inflammatory cytokine biomarkers of the disease

Author:

Sharma Ravi Kant12,Sharma Manu Rashmi3,Mahendra Aneet4,Singh Simranjit5,Sood Shaveta6,Upadhyay Sushil Kumar1,Sharma Anil Kumar7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Bio‐Sciences and Technology Maharishi Markandeshwar (Deemed to be University) Ambala Haryana India

2. Department of Biochemistry Dr. Harvansh Singh Judge Institute of Dental Sciences & Hospital, Panjab University Chandigarh India

3. Department of Health and Planning ESI Hospital Una Himachal Pradesh India

4. Department of Dermatology MMIMSR, Maharishi Markandeshwar (Deemed to be University) Ambala Haryana India

5. PhD. Scholar,Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology Saveetha Dental College and Hospitals Chennai Tamil Nadu India

6. Department of Periodontics Dr. Harvansh Singh Judge Institute of Dental Sciences and Hospital, Panjab University Chandigarh India

7. Department of Biotechnology Amity University Punjab Mohali India

Abstract

AbstractThe aim of the study is to expound the effect of psoriasis on salivary glands by evaluating the secretion of saliva and salivary cytokine biomarkers in patients with psoriasis. This study was conducted by recruiting 120 subjects that included 60 patients diagnosed clinically with active psoriasis and 60 healthy controls who were age and gender matched to psoriatic subjects. Unstimulated whole saliva was collected from all the subjects by spitting method, and levels of tumor necrosis factor‐alpha (TNF‐α), interferon‐gamma (IFN‐γ), interleukin‐2 (IL‐2), and IL‐10 (IL‐10) were determined via enzyme‐linked immunosorbent assay (BT Lab, Shanghai, China). Secretion of saliva in psoriasis patients was considerably reduced than in healthy controls. The concentrations of pro‐inflammatory cytokines (TNF‐α, IFN‐γ, and IL‐2) were significantly increased, whereas level of anti‐inflammatory cytokine (IL‐10) was markedly decreased in the saliva of psoriasis patients with hyposalivation compared to healthy subjects. Our results demonstrated significant negative correlation of salivary flow rates with the disease severity. No significant correlations were obtained between salivary levels of tested cytokines and salivary flow rates in our study. Findings of the study reflect inflammation of salivary glands with reduced salivary flow rates in psoriasis patients. The inflammatory responses in salivary gland tissues by virtue of increased pro‐inflammatory cytokines concentrations together with lower anti‐inflammatory cytokine levels may have a role in affecting the saliva secretion in psoriasis patients. Secretion of unstimulated saliva in psoriasis patients decreases with the severity and duration of the disease.

Publisher

Wiley

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