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Identification of Selected Putative Oral Pathogens in Primary Root Canal Infections Associated with Symptoms
Institution:1. State University of Maringá, Postgraduate Program in Biological Sciences, Laboratory of Technological Innovation in the Development of Drugs and Cosmetics, BR-87020-900, Maringá, Brazil;2. State University of Maringá, Postgraduate Program in Pharmaceutical Sciences, Pharmaceutical Biology Laboratory, Palafito, BR-87020-900, Maringá, Brazil;3. State University of Maringá, Postgraduate Program in Pharmaceutical Sciences, Laboratory of Technological Innovation in the Development of Drugs and Cosmetics, BR-87020-900, Maringá, Brazil;4. University of Münster, Institute of Pharmaceutical Biology and Phytochemistry, Corrensstraße 48, D-48149 Münster, Germany
Abstract:Overwhelming evidence indicates that bacteria play an essential role in the etiology of different forms of periradicular diseases. The purpose of this study was to assess the prevalence of 11 putative oral pathogens in root canals associated with symptoms using a 16S rDNA-directed polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay. Associations of the target species in pairs were also recorded. Samples were obtained from the root canals of 20 symptomatic teeth. DNA was extracted from the samples and analysed for the presence of the target bacterial species using PCR. All samples were positive for the presence of bacterial DNA. In general, Treponema denticola was detected in 50% of the cases (ten of 20), Bacteroides forsythus in 40% (eight of 20), Porphyromonas endodontalis in 40% (eight of 20), Porphyromonas gingivalis in 30% (six of 20), Campylobacter rectus in 20% (two of ten), Micromonas micros in 20% (two of ten), Prevotella nigrescens in 10% (two of 20), and Streptococcus anginosus in 10% (one of ten cases). No sample yielded Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans, Prevotella intermedia or Fusobacterium nucleatum. The most common bacterial pairs observed between the target species were B. forsythus/P. gingivalis (five cases), B. forsythus/P. endodontalis (four cases), P. endodontalis/P. gingivalis (four cases) andB. forsythus/T. denticola (three cases). The relatively high prevalence of T. denticola, B. forsythus, P. endodontalis, and P. gingivalis suggests that these bacterial species are implicated in the development of symptoms associated with infected root canals.
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