Rozijnen tegen cariës en tandvleesontstekingen*
In tegenstelling tot wat vaak gedacht wordt zijn rozijnen
wel goed voor de tanden. Sterker nog in rozijnen zitten speciale antioxidanten
die bacteriën in de mond bestrijden die verantwoordelijk zijn voor tandcariës
(gaatjes) en parodontale aandoeningen (tandvleesontstekingen).
Raisins As A Functional Food
For Oral Health
Compounds found in raisins
fight bacteria in the mouth that cause cavities and gum disease, according to
researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago, College of Dentistry.
"Our laboratory
analyses showed that phytochemicals in this popular snack food suppress the
growth of several species of oral bacteria associated with caries and gum
disease," said Christine D. Wu, Professor and Associate Dean for Research
at the UIC College of Dentistry and lead author of the study.
The data will be presented
at the annual meeting of the American Society for Microbiology beginning June 5,
2005.
Routine chemical analyses
identified five compounds in Thompson seedless raisins: oleanolic acid,
oleanolic aldehyde, betulin, betulinic acid, and 5-(hydroxymethyl)-2-furfural.
All of these are known phytochemicals - antioxidants found in plants.
Oleanolic acid inhibited the
growth of two species of oral bacteria: Streptococcus mutans, which causes
cavities, and Porphyromonas gingivalis, which causes periodontal disease.
The compound was effective
against the bacteria at concentrations ranging from about 4 to 1,000 µg/ml. At
a concentration of 31 µg/ml, oleanolic acid also blocked S. mutans adherence to
surfaces. Adherence is crucial for the bacteria to form dental plaque, the
sticky biofilm consisting of oral bacteria that accumulates on teeth. After a
sugary meal, these bacteria release acids that erode the tooth enamel.
Wu said that the data
counter a longstanding public perception that raisins promote cavities.
"Raisins are perceived
as sweet and sticky, and any food that contains sugar and is sticky is assumed
to cause cavities," Wu said. "But our study suggests the contrary.
Phytochemicals in raisins may benefit oral health by fighting bacteria that
cause cavities and gum disease."
In an earlier unpublished
study, Wu’s collaborator Dr. Shahrbanoo Fadavi (Pediatric Dentistry, UIC
College of Dentistry) found that adding raisins to bran cereal did not increase
the acidity of dental plaque. However, the commercial raisin-bran cereal with
added sugar was most acidogenic compared with raisins or bran cereal alone.
"Foods that are sticky
do not necessarily cause tooth decay; it is mainly the added sugar (sucrose)
that contributes to the problem" Wu said.
The present study was funded
by the California Raisin Marketing Board.
Besides collaborator Dr. A.
Douglas Kinghorn, Adjunct Professor at the UIC College of Pharmacy, other
scientists involved in the study were Dr. Jose F. Rivero-Cruz and Dr. Min Zhu (both,
UIC College of Dentistry) and Dr. Baoning Su (UIC College of Pharmacy).
(Juni 2005)