Dental implants occasionally entail complications: Six to fifteen
percent of patients develop an inflammatory response in the years after
receiving a dental implant. This is caused by bacteria destroying the
soft tissue and the bone around the implant in the worst case.
In future, patients will benefit from a quick and affordable method
assessing whether they carry such bacteria: using a chewing gum based
diagnostic test developed by a pharmaceutical research team at the
Julius-Maximilians-Universität (JMU) Würzburg in Bavaria, Germany.
In practice, the test works as follows: If there is an inflammation
in the oral cavity, a bittering agent is released while chewing the gum.
Patients can then visit their dentist who confirms the diagnosis and
treats the disease. This type of early detection aims at preventing
serious complications such as bone loss.
"Anyone can use this new diagnostic tool anywhere and anytime
without any technical equipment," Professor Lorenz Meinel says; he is
the head of the JMU Chair for Drug Formulation and Delivery. He
developed the new diagnostic tool with Dr. Jennifer Ritzer and her team;
the invention is currently featured in an article in the journal Nature Communications.
Enzymes release bitter taste
The scientific background: In the presence of inflammatory
conditions, specific protein-degrading enzymes are activated in the
mouth. In just five minutes, these enzymes also break down a special
ingredient of the chewing gum, thereby releasing a bittering agent that
could not be tasted before.
Meinel's team provided the proof that this principle actually works.
First studies using the saliva of patients were conducted at Merli
Dental Clinic in Rimini.
Company establishment planned
To launch the chewing gum into the market, Meinel's team plans to
set up a company. The professor assumes that it will take two to three
years until the gum is commercially available.
Chewing gum rapid tests for other medical applications are presently
under development. "We hope to be able to diagnose other diseases with
our "anyone, anywhere, anytime" diagnostics to identify and adress these
diseases as early as possible," Meinel explains.
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