Salivary Cortisone as a Potential Alternative to Cortisol in Periodontitis Severity Assessment
Dimitar Dimitrov, Antoaneta Mlachkova, Velitchka Dosseva-Panova

TL;DR
This study explores salivary cortisone as a potential alternative to cortisol for assessing periodontitis severity, finding it comparable with higher specificity.
Contribution
The study introduces salivary cortisone as a novel biomarker for periodontitis severity assessment.
Findings
Cortisone levels were significantly higher in severe periodontitis (Stage III/IV) compared to mild/moderate stages.
Cortisone showed strong correlation with cortisol and was positively associated with IL-6 and clinical indicators of disease severity.
ROC analysis indicated cortisone had higher specificity than cortisol for identifying severe periodontitis.
Abstract
Salivary cortisol is widely used to investigate stress–periodontitis interactions, but its measurement is affected by methodological limitations. Cortisone, the predominant salivary glucocorticoid, may offer analytical advantages, yet its role in periodontitis remains unexplored. This study evaluated salivary cortisone in relation to periodontal disease severity and compared its performance with cortisol. Sixty-seven periodontitis patients were classified as Stage I/II (n = 32) or Stage III/IV (n = 35). A comprehensive periodontal examination was performed, including FMPS, FMBS, PPD, CAL, BoP, and the BL/Age ratio. Unstimulated morning saliva samples were analyzed for cortisone and cortisol using liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry, and for IL-1β and IL-6 using ELISA. Both cortisone and cortisol levels were significantly higher in Stage III/IV periodontitis (p = 0.014).…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdrenal Hormones and Disorders · Stress Responses and Cortisol · Oral microbiology and periodontitis research
