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    Curr Opin Dent. 1992 Mar;2:80-90.

    Host modulation with tetracyclines and their chemically modified analogues.

    Source

    State University of New York at Stony Brook.

    Abstract

    Recent studies have suggested the use of drugs to modulate host response as a new approach in periodontal therapy. In this regard, the tetracycline antibiotics have been found to inhibit host-derived collagenases and other matrix metalloproteinases by a mechanism independent of the antimicrobial activity of these drugs; this effect may suppress connective tissue breakdown during periodontal disease and during a variety of medical disorders including (but not limited to) noninfected corneal ulcers, serious (sometimes life-threatening) skin-blistering diseases, rheumatoid arthritis and osteoarthritis, systemically--as well as locally--induced bone loss, and perhaps even tumor-induced angiogenesis. Two therapeutic strategies based on the host-modulating properties of tetracyclines are currently being developed: 1) the use of low-dose doxycycline (the most potent anticollagenase of commercially available tetracyclines) formulations, which do not appear to result in tetracycline side effects such as the emergence of antibiotic-resistant microorganisms; and 2) the production of a family of chemically modified tetracyclines that have lost their antimicrobial activity, but have retained their anticollagenase activity. A description of several of these compounds and a discussion of their efficacy in inhibiting collagenases in vitro and reducing tissue destruction in several animal models of periodontal and medical diseases is presented.

    PMID:
    1325849
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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