Coconut oil could combat tooth decay

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A lovely pair of coconuts, and they cure decay too!

Digested coconut oil is able to attack the bacteria that cause tooth decay because it is a natural antibiotic that could be incorporated into commercial dental care products, scientists from Athlone Institute of Technology (AIT) discovered in a recent study.

The team from AIT tested the antibacterial action of coconut oil in its natural state and coconut oil that had been treated with enzymes, in a process similar to digestion. The oils were tested against strains of Streptococcus bacteria which are common inhabitants of the mouth. They found that enzyme-modified coconut oil strongly inhibited the growth of most strains of Streptococcus bacteria including Streptococcus mutans.

The researchers in AIT’s Bioscience Research Institute, led by Dr Damien Brady, presented their work this week at the Society for General Microbiology’s autumn conference at the University of Warwick.

Many previous studies have shown that partially digested foodstuffs are active against micro-organisms. Earlier work on enzyme-modified milk showed that it was able to reduce the binding of S. mutans to tooth enamel, which prompted the group to investigate the effect of other enzyme-modified foods on bacteria.

Further work will examine how coconut oil interacts with Streptococcus bacteria at the molecular level and which other strains of harmful bacteria and yeasts it is active against. Additional testing by the group at AIT found that enzyme-modified coconut oil was also harmful to the yeast Candida albicans that can cause thrush.

The researchers suggest that enzyme-modified coconut oil has potential as a marketable antimicrobial which could be of particular interest to the oral healthcare industry. Dr Brady said: “Dental caries is a commonly overlooked health problem affecting 60-90% of children and the majority of adults in industrialised countries. Incorporating enzyme-modified coconut oil into dental hygiene products would be an attractive alternative to chemical additives, particularly as it works at relatively low concentrations. Also, with increasing antibiotic resistance, it is important that we turn our attention to new ways to combat microbial infection.”

The work also contributes to our understanding of antibacterial activity in the human gut. “Our data suggests that products of human digestion show antimicrobial activity. This could have implications for how bacteria colonize the cells lining the digestive tract and for overall gut health,” explained Dr Brady.

“Our research has shown that digested milk protein not only reduced the adherence of harmful bacteria to human intestinal cells but also prevented some of them from gaining entrance into the cell. We are currently researching coconut oil and other enzyme-modified foodstuffs to identify how they interfere with the way bacteria cause illness and disease,” he said.

 

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6 COMMENTS

  1. Dear Bite editors

    Could you please send me a citation of the original reference paper for this article? It does sound quite interesting but I would like to read up on the scientific details and research evidence.

    Cheers

    Dr Emma

  2. Hi editors again

    Couldn’t help but I did a little of my own research on this article. Apart from a press release article, the sources and scientific evidence are a little lacking.

    Out of interest, the original article, and interview of the author on ‘oil-pulling’ is here:

    http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2012/12/08/coconut-oil-combats-tooth-decay.aspx

    And the references that this article citates from, are indeed, more interviews from the author and the original press release from the AIT.

    http://www.coconutresearchcenter.org/article oil pulling.htm

    Even in the one article that the ‘coconut research centre’ lists, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3119748/

    which is testing bacterial inhibition on a range of pure fatty acids (not digested coconut oil), the results show lauric acid (which is dominant in processed coconut oil) was not significantly effective in bacterial inhibition.

    Perhaps as a publisher to dentists who aim to follow best practice/ evidence-based dentistry, one should caution on interest articles that there may be a lack of detailed research, or worse, personal anecdotes as evidence, and readers should follow up with their further investigation. Already I have had other dentists passing this news article on and directing patients to rinse with coconut oil as genuine dental advice, in place of products that have been tested and proven to be therapeutically effective.

    Warm regards from a dental scientist

    Emma

    • Good points Emma. And what was the effect of the undigested coconut oil? Do we need to swallow it then regurgitate to get the best effect, or will saliva do the job?!!

      • Just found the answer to the undigested coconut oil .. it had no effect on the bacteria.
        Perhaps in oil pulling the saliva digests the oil enough to have a protective effect.

    • Emma, thank you for your words of caution. I am guilty of reading headlines and bite sized articles and not following up on the science that backs these claims up. I was dismayed to see the lack of evidence supporting this news article and i hope Bite Magazine takes heed

      Shayne

  3. Following on, maybe retract that last comment because I can’t find any direct link from Dr Mendosa and the AIT study.

    A patient of mine sent me links to the Mercolo.com and was asking for more information about coconut oil rinsing, and I noticed it had links back to the AIT study and BITE magazine. But Dr Damian Brady does not seemed to be linked to this website in any way.

    It would be still nice to have a read up of the original paper if you have it.

    Thanks!

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