Abstract
The objective of this study was to evaluate the influence of dietary naringenin (NAR) supplementation on physiological molar crestal alveolar bone (CAB)–cemento-enamel junction (CEJ) distances in young male albino rats. The effects of diets supplemented with 0.09%, 0.18%, 0.36%, and 0.72% NAR, at the expense of dextrose, were tested on 40 young rats, divided equally into five groups, for a period of 42 days. Rat skulls were defleshed, and CAB–CEJ distance was scored according to the modified method of Keyes and Gold. Data were analyzed using one-way analysis of variance, post hoc Tukey's test, and Spearman's (R2) correlation. P < .05 was used to reject the null hypothesis. NAR showed a statistically significant inverse dose-dependent relationship on CAB–lingual alveolar bone distance (P < .05). In all cases lingual CAB–CEJ distance was larger than buccal CAB–CEJ distance. Thus dietary NAR supplementation was shown to significantly reduce molar CAB–CEJ distance (P < .001–.05) during alveolar development in young male rats.
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