PurposeTo determine whether the presence of periodontitis (PD) and Porphyromonas gingivalis (Pg) in the subgingival biofilm associates with the development of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) in treatment naïve preclinical stage of arthritis patients.MethodsWe conducted a prospective cohort study of 72 consecutive patients with arthralgia who had never been treated with any anti-rheumatic drugs or glucocorticoids. Periodontal status at baseline was assessed by dentists. PD was defined stringently by the maximal probing depth≧4 mm, or by the classification by the 5th European Workshop in Periodontology (EWP) in 2005 using attachment loss. Up to eight plaque samples were obtained from each patient and the presence of Pg was determined by Taqman PCR. The patients were followed up for 2 years and introduction rate of methotrexate (MTX) treatment on the diagnosis of RA was compared in patients with or without PD or Pg.ResultsPatients with PD (probing depth≧4mm) had higher arthritis activity (p = 0.02) and higher risk for future introduction of MTX treatment on the diagnosis of RA during the follow up than patients without PD (Hazard ratio 2.68, p = 0.03). Arthritis activity and risk for MTX introduction increased with the severity of PD assessed by EWP, although not statistically significant. On the other hand, presence of Pg was not associated with arthritis activity (p = 0.72) or the risk for MTX introduction (p = 0.45).ConclusionIn treatment naïve arthralgia patients, PD, but not the presence of Pg, associates with arthritis activity and future requirement of MTX treatment on the diagnosis of RA.
C-type natriuretic peptide (CNP) is a potent stimulator of long bone and vertebral development via endochondral ossification. In the present study, we investigated the effects of CNP on craniofacial skeletogenesis, which consists of both endochondral and membranous ossification. Morphometric analyses of crania from CNP knockout and transgenic mice revealed that CNP stimulates longitudinal growth along the cranial length, but does not regulate cranial width. CNP markedly increased the length of spheno-occipital synchondrosis in fetal murine organ cultures, and the thickness of cultured murine chondrocytes from the spheno-occipital synchondrosis or nasal septum, resulting in the stimulation of longitudinal cranial growth. Mandibular growth includes endochondral and membranous ossification; although CNP stimulated endochondral bone growth of condylar cartilage in cultured fetal murine mandibles, differences in the lengths of the lower jaw between CNP knockout or transgenic mice and wild-type mice were smaller than those observed for the lengths of the upper jaw. These results indicate that CNP primarily stimulates endochondral ossification in the craniofacial region and is crucial for midfacial skeletogenesis.
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