Barrier properties of inflamed denture‐loaded palatal mucosa to water

Abstract
The barrier property of inflamed palatal mucosa to water has been studied in eight adult edentulous persons with a generalized denture stomatitis, by measuring the transmucosal water flow under varying osmotic gradients. Flow rates were registered gravimetrically in solute saturated filter paper discs after 10-min periods of mucosal contact, using solutions with an osmolarity of 0, 0.25, 0.30, 0.38, 0.50 and 0.75 osmol sucrose/l. The histology of the mucosal areas was evaluated from cytologic scrapings, and biopsy material from two persons. The inflow with use of pure water was 2.98 mg/cm2/10 min, being about three and a half times greater than through the intact mucosal surface. The point of isotony of the inflamed mucosa ranged between 0.30 and 0.36 with a mean value of 0.33 osmol/l, thus being of the same magnitude as in plasma and tissue fluid. The observations from the biopsy material were in accordance with earlier histological evidence from generalized denture stomatitis, indicating that the permeability properties of the inflamed mucosa belonged to epithelial cell layers located in the lower part of the spinous layer.