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Dental Floss Could Deliver Next-Gen Vaccines, No Needles Required
Dental Floss Could Deliver Next-Gen Vaccines, No Needles Required

Gizmodo

time04-08-2025

  • Health
  • Gizmodo

Dental Floss Could Deliver Next-Gen Vaccines, No Needles Required

Flu shot season is around the corner, and while injections remain the most common form of vaccination, scientists are working hard to find other ways to deliver inoculations that don't involve shoving a needle into your flesh. And in a new study, researchers think they might have found another novel approach: dental floss. In the new work, a team of scientists based in the U.S. demonstrated how this might work on lab mice, finding that vaccine delivery via dental floss was more effective at stimulating antibody production than if the vaccine was delivered under the mice's tongues and about as effective as a nasal spray delivery method. If the results hold true for humans, then some vaccines could be given via tooth tape and without the need for needles. 'Here we show that flat tape dental floss can deliver vaccines through the junctional epithelium of the gingival sulcus, exploiting its naturally leaky properties,' the researchers wrote in the study, which was published in July in the journal Nature Biomedical Engineering. The junctional epithelium is the technical term for the deep tissue between the tooth and the gum. Epithelial tissues are one of three layers of so-called mucosal surfaces, which are the membranes that lubricate and protect your body's organs and cavities, including your nose, mouth, and intestines. Many pathogens like influenza and Covid-19 can enter the body through these mucosal surfaces. 'If a vaccine is given by injection, antibodies are primarily produced in the bloodstream throughout the body, and relatively few antibodies are produced on mucosal surfaces,' Harvinder Singh Gill, co-author of the study and a professor in Nanomedicine at North Carolina State University, explained in a statement. 'But we know that when a vaccine is given via the mucosal surface, antibodies are stimulated not only in the bloodstream, but also on mucosal surfaces.' 'This improves the body's ability to prevent infection, because there is an additional line of antibody defense before a pathogen enters the body,' he added. Because the tissue in between our teeth and gums is more permeable than other similar tissues, like those lining your stomach, lungs, and intestines, then it should be able to introduce a vaccine into the body relatively easily, triggering the production of antibodies throughout the mucosal layers. To test this idea, the researchers applied peptide flu vaccine on unwaxed dental floss, and then used it to floss the teeth of lab mice. Gill and colleagues then compared the animals' antibody production to that of mice that either received the peptide flu vaccine via a nasal spray or under their tongues. The dental floss vaccine delivered significantly superior antibody production on mucosal surfaces than the under-the-tongue inoculation, and was comparable to the nasal spray. 'This is extremely promising, because most vaccine formulations cannot be given via the nasal epithelium—the barrier features in that mucosal surface prevent efficient uptake of the vaccine,' said Gill, adding that nasal delivery also carries the risk of the vaccine reaching the brain, which could pose safety concerns. 'Vaccination via the junctional epithelium offers no such risk,' he said. The team also tested the floss approach with three other vaccine classes—proteins, inactivated viruses, and mRNA—and revealed that the novel method triggered antibodies both in the bloodstream and mucosal surfaces in all of them. What's more, their efficacy wasn't impeded if the mice consumed food or water right after flossing. To investigate the practicality of the flossing approach, the researchers also tested its mechanics with humans. Using floss picks, they coated the tape with food dye and asked study participants to try and get it as deep between their teeth and their gums as they could. Participants were able to deposit around 60% of the dye in the gum pocket, indicating that vaccine-coated floss picks could be an effective way to deliver vaccines to that tissue. As for costs, the researchers think that it would be similar in price to other vaccine delivery techniques. However, there are some inherent limitations to a floss vaccine. 'For example, it can only be used for individuals with teeth,' the researchers explained in the study. 'Therefore, this approach cannot be used in neonates [newborns] until they experience teeth eruption, which typically occurs at around 6 months of age. Further, the impact of gingival tissue infection on vaccination is unclear. Additional studies are required to answer this question.'

New Kind of Dental Floss Could Replace Vaccine Needles, Study Finds
New Kind of Dental Floss Could Replace Vaccine Needles, Study Finds

Yahoo

time30-07-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

New Kind of Dental Floss Could Replace Vaccine Needles, Study Finds

A fear of needles is a common reason for avoiding vaccines, even among many adults. Now researchers have come up with a rather clever alternative: dental floss. Led by a team from Texas Tech University, the researchers first identified an often overlooked surface in the mouth as an entry point for vaccines: the junctional epithelium (JE), which sits where the gums meet the teeth. The JE is leaky by design, because it allows immune cells to move around and defend the oral cavity from bacterial attack. The researchers wondered whether this could also make this part of the mouth a suitable target for vaccines. "We hypothesized that this leakiness of the JE could expedite the entry of vaccine antigens, and the abundance of immune cells in this microenvironment could elicit an adaptive immune response," the researchers write in their recently published paper. Related: Delivering medications to the JE is complicated by the tissue's seclusion within the gumline, which is why it hasn't really been considered as a potential location for introducing vaccines. That's where floss comes in, which is perfect for getting into tight spaces. The researchers tested their hypothesis by coating dental floss with different types of vaccines and testing them on mice across a period of several weeks. There were numerous encouraging indicators: strong immune responses were observed in the mouth and throughout the bodies of the mice, and the floss vaccine was effective in protecting mice against a later flu infection. Further tests were conducted on human volunteers using dye rather than a vaccine, since clinical trials are still some way off. The amount of dye that reached the JE target via flossing was enough to suggest that this really could work in us too. "These findings establish floss-based vaccination as a simple, needle-free strategy that enhances vaccine delivery and immune activation compared with existing mucosal immunization methods," write the researchers. It's not the first time scientists have looked beyond the thorough cleaning job that floss does. Earlier this year research showed that floss could also be adapted to measure stress levels in the body, potentially giving doctors another useful diagnostic tool. As well as being potentially less scary for those with a phobia of needles, floss-based vaccines would be easier to transport and store. Doctors and nurses wouldn't be needed to administer them, and they could even be delivered in the post – a real advantage in the case of pandemics such as COVID-19. Researchers have previously tried to deliver vaccines orally under the tongue and in the cheek, but not enough of the vaccine penetrates the tissue into circulation. While there's still a lot of work to do with this new approach, the potential is clear. "Due to drawbacks associated with injectable vaccines, such as pain and needle phobia, potential transmission of blood-borne pathogens from unsafe injection practices and the limited activation of mucosal immunity, there is a need for alternative approaches for vaccine delivery," write the researchers. The research has been published in Nature Biomedical Engineering. Related News World's Most Common Pain Relief Drug May Induce Risky Behavior, Research Suggests Human Brains Rapidly Aged in The Pandemic, And It Wasn't Just The Virus Eating Eggs Can Actually Lower Bad Cholesterol, New Study Says Solve the daily Crossword

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