Preventive effects of melatonin and amifostine on irradiated rats with experimental periodontitis
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Erişim
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessTarih
2024Yazar
Yorgancılar, NurKöse, Oğuz
Rakıcı, Sema Yılmaz
Mercantepe, Tolga
Akyıldız, Kerimali
Tümkaya, Levent
Yılmaz, Adnan
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Yorgancilar, N., Kose, O., Rakici, S. Y., Mercantepe, T., Akyildiz, K., Tumkaya, L., & Yilmaz, A. (2024). Preventive effects of melatonin and amifostine on irradiated rats with experimental periodontitis. BMC Oral Health, 24(1), 1453. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12903-024-05251-0Özet
Background: The aim of this study was to investigate the preventive effects of amifostine and melatonin oxidatively, biochemically and histomorphometrically in rats with radiotherapy-induced experimental periodontitis. Methods: 40 female Sprague-Dawley rats were divided into 5 groups: Control, experimental periodontitis (Ep), Ep + radiotherapy (Ep + Rt), Ep + Rt + amifostine (Ep + Rt + Ami), Ep + Rt + melatonin (Ep + Rt + Mel). The day after induction of periodontitis by ligature, a single dose of 5 Gy radiotherapy was administered. On the same day, treatments with amifostine (200 mg/kg) for 3 days and melatonin (10 mg/kg) for 15 days were started. By after 23 days of experiment, periodontal bone loss was measured by histomorphometry. RANKL, OPG and Caspase-3 activities were analyzed immunohistochemically and inflammatory cytokine (IL-1β, IL-10, IL-6, TNF-α) levels and oxidative stress (TOS/TAS) were analyzed biochemically in tissue homogenates. Results: It was observed that there was a significant difference in many biochemical parameters and oxidative stress levels between the control group and Ep + Rt (p < 0.05). Alveolar bone destruction in the melatonin prophylaxis group was observed to be close to control (p > 0.05). Melatonin significantly improved biochemical, histochemical, apoptotic and bone loss levels in irradiated experimental periodontitis rats (p < 0.05). When comparing the two drug groups (Ep + Rt + Ami and Ep + Rt + Mel), no statistically significant difference was found at any parameter level (p > 0.05). Conclusion: Both melatonin and amifostine can significantly limit RT-induced periodontal bone loss by suppressing inflammatory stress, apoptotic mechanisms, and RANKL-related osteoclastic activity. Given the limited side effects of melatonin, it may be an alternative to amifostine.