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Stress and dental caries in the rat
Authors:Myrin Borysenko  Samuel Turesky  Joan Z. Borysenko  Fred Quimby  Herbert Benson
Affiliation:(1) Department of Anatomy, Tufts University School of Medicine, 02111 Boston, Massachusetts;(2) Department of Periodontology, Tufts University School of Dental Medicine, 02111 Boston, Massachusetts;(3) Department of Medicine, Division of Behavioral Medicine, Beth Israel Hospital, Harvard Medical School, 02215 Boston, Massachusetts;(4) Department of Laboratory Animal Science, Tufts New England Medical Center, 02111 Boston, Massachusetts
Abstract:The stress of crowding and exposure to inescapable electric shock increased both the incidence and the severity of dental caries in rats housed in a conventional animal facility. Male Osborne-Mendel rats were inoculated intraorally with cariogenic bacteria, fed a high-sucrose diet, and housed in either a conventional or a sheltered facility. Rats in both housing conditions were subdivided into control and stress groups. At the end of the 56-day trial period, stressed rats from conventional housing had a significant increase in both incidence and severity of dental caries in comparison to their controls. In contrast, stressed rats from sheltered housing had a trend toward increased cariogenesis which reached significance in only one of five scores. These rats also failed to gain weight comparable to their controls, making it possible that stress-induced reduction in appetite partially offset stress-induced exacerbation in cariogenesis.This investigation was supported in part by the following Grants from the United States Public Health Service: CA 20093, HL 22727, and HL 07374.
Keywords:stress  dental caries  social environment  behavior
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