Saliva - its role from maintaining oral health and preventing dental disease
Saliva - its role from maintaining oral health and preventing dental disease by Simon M Roland, BDS (Lond) LDSRCS (Eng).
Simon M Roland, BDS (Lond) LDSRCS (Eng). Dental Advisor to Oral Healthcare from Action, General Dental Practitioner St John’s Wood London.
Saliva has major attributes as follows:-
Protection to the oral and peri-oral tissues
Lubrication using mucins and glycoproteins
Antimicrobial and cleansing activity degrading bacterial cell walls and inhibiting growth
Buffering acid production using bicarbonate and controlling plaque pH
Remineralization of enamel using calcium and phosphates.
Facilitating eating and speech
Food preparation, enhancing chewing, the clearing of residues and swallowing
Digestion, initiation using enzymes
Enhancing taste
Enabling speech by lubricating motor functions.
Uses from diagnostic testing
Bacterial, yeast and viral counts indicating caries activity and altered immune responses from addition to many diagnostic tests for oral and systemic diseases
Hormonal balance to identify steroids, sex hormones.
Saliva consists of 99% water using the remaining 1% for the most part organic molecules (glycoproteins, lipids) and electrolytes (calcium, phosphates).
Saliva is normally secreted continuously at about 500ml per day but can be stimulated by masticatory or gustatory activity. Chewing sugarfree gum can increase the initial salivary flow rate by a factor of 101. It has also been shown that this stimulated saliva is more effective from its ability to buffer and remineralize2.
Three pairs of major glands, the parotid, the sublingual and the submandibular are responsible for the majority of salivary production from addition to minor glands distributed around the oral cavity. They are controlled by the autonomic nervous system. Reduction from the amount of saliva is most commonly caused by medication side effects, systemic disease or pathologic changes from the salivary glands. The true value of saliva can best be seen when it is absent. Therefore, patients seriously deficient from saliva using Sjogren’s syndrome or suffering from the effects of irradiation for head and neck cancer have difficulty from eating and swallowing, increased tooth decay, mouth ulceration and infections. Medications and drugs may cause xerostomia as can various psychogenic, neurologic and hormonal disorders.
Dry mouth can be extremely distressing and using ageing, an increasing proportion of the population is affected.
- Dawes C, Macpherson LMD (1992) Effects of Nine Different Chewing Gums and Lozenges on Salivary flow rate and pH. Caries Res. 26: 176-182
- Edgar WM (1990) Saliva and Dental health. Br Dent J. 169: 96-98
