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The Bacterial Etiology Of Destructive Periodontal Disease: Current Concepts

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An inflammatory disease of the supporting tissues of the teeth caused by ... Cementum. Bone. PDL. 100 Years of Periodontal Microbiology ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Bacterial Etiology Of Destructive Periodontal Disease: Current Concepts


1
The Bacterial Etiology Of Destructive Periodontal
Disease Current Concepts
  • Sigmund S. Socransky and Anne D. Haffajee
  • J periodontol 1992 63322-331
  • Cecilia Perera O.
  • Department of Perio

2
Periodontal Disease
  • Definition
  • An inflammatory disease of the supporting tissues
    of the teeth caused by specific microorganism or
    group of specific microorganism, resulting in
    progressive destruction of the periodontal
    ligament and alveolar bone with pocket formation,
    recession or both.
  • (Carranzas Clinical Periodontology 2002)

3
Periodontal Structures
  • Attachment Apparatus
  • Cementum
  • Bone
  • PDL

4
100 Years of Periodontal Microbiology
  • The time line is divided into three phases
  • Initial phase
  • Specificity in the etiology of disease was the
    prominent concept
  • A period of Disillusionament
  • Non-specificity in bacterial etiology
  • A return to the concept of specificity in the
    etiology of periodontal disease ( 1970s)

5
100 years of Periodontal Microbiology
  • 1960s
  • Spirochete might be the cause of acute
    necrotizing ulcerative gingivitis (ANUG)
  • Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans (A.A.)
    possible pathogen in localized aggressive
    periodontitis
  • Porphyromonas Gingivalis suggested to be
    important in chronic periodontitis.

6
100 years of Periodontal Microbiology
7
Prospective Studies
  • Haffajee, Socrasky, Smith, Dibart 1992
  • 67 subjects
  • Active disease state if gt 2.5 mm Attachment loss
  • 14 species determined in SubGing samples
  • 10 suspected pathogens
  • 4 suspected beneficial species

8
Complexity of the problem
  • Technical difficulties
  • Taking of the plaque samples
  • Uncontaminated samples is extremely challenging
    to obtain
  • Discriminating pathogens from those encountered
    is difficult
  • Problems growing and maintaining the pathogens.

9
Complexity of the Problem
  • Inadequate understanding of Disease Pathogenesis
  • Misclassification of the disease type and status
  • Disease due to different species at different
    sites
  • Consecutive episodes of disease due to different
    species
  • Erroneous conclusion of samples taken from sites
    in remission
  • Pathogens may result from the disease rather than
    the cause
  • Two or more species act together and cause
    disease
  • The carrier state of disease can represent a long
    lag phase prior to detection of disease
  • Differences in clonal types

10
Approach to Determining Etiologic Agents
  • Kochs Postulates
  • The agent must be routinely isolated from
    diseased individuals
  • The agent must not be recovered from cases of
    other forms of disease or non-pathogenically
  • Produce a similar disease when inoculated into
    susceptible laboratory animals

11
Approach to Determining Etiologic Agents
  • In recent years, periodontal researchers have
    extended Kochs postulates including
  • Association
  • Requires that suspected pathogenic species be
    more frequently detected and at higher level in
    cases than in the controls
  • Elimination
  • Successful therapy will diminish the level of a
    pathogen and halt disease progression
  • Host response
  • the organism must have high levels of serum,
    salivary and gingival crevicular fluid antibody
    against it in periodontally diseased subjects

12
Approach to Determining Etiologic Agents
  • Virulence factors
  • the organism must be found to produce virulence
    factors in vitro which can be correlated with
    clinical histopathology
  • Animal Pathogenicity
  • the organism must mimic similar pathogenic
    properties in an appropriate animal model

13
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16
Evolving Concepts
Susceptible Host
Active Disease
Presence of Pathogens
Absence of Beneficial Species
Destructive Periodontal Disease
17
Evolving Concepts
  • Susceptible Host
  • Impaired Neutrophils
  • Inadequate or unregulated immunological response
  • LPS Responsiveness
  • AIDS
  • Diabetes
  • Smoking
  • Drugs

18
Evolving Concepts
  • Presence of Pathogens
  • A. actinomycetemcomitans
  • T. forsythus
  • E. corrodens
  • F. nucleatum
  • P. micros
  • P. gingivalis
  • P. intermedia
  • C. rectus
  • Selenomonas sp.
  • Eubacterium sp.
  • Spirochetes

19
Evolving Concepts
  • Absence of Beneficial species
  • Actinomyces sp
  • C. ochracea
  • ? C. ochracea ? P. gingivalis
  • Diminished attachment loss
  • S. mitis
  • S. mitis procduces H2O2
  • Kills A. a.
  • S. sanguis
  • V. parvula

20
Microbial Complexes in Subgingival Plaque
  • Yellow
  • Green
  • Purple
  • Orange
  • Red

21
Veillonella parvula Actinomyces odontolyticus
S. mitis S. oralis S. sanguis S. gordonii S.
intermedius
C. rectus C. showae E. nodatum F. nucleatum P.
intermedia P. micros P. nigrescens
P. gingivalis T. denticola T. forsythensis
Capnocytophaga spp. Eikinella corrodens A.
actinomycetemcomitans
22
Role of Disease Susceptibility
  • Microbial species unevenly distributed from
    subject to subject and from site to site
  • Subjects with widespread disease had more sites
    showing new attachment loss than subjects with
    fewer affected sites at baseline
  • Percentages of suspected pathogens is highest in
    subjects with localized destruction and lowest in
    widespread disease subjects
  • Subjects with widespread disease and high levels
    of suspected pathogens had a greater number of
    active sites than subjects in other groups

23
Bacterial interactions
  • Different types of microorganisms existing in
    periodontal pockets may act synergistically to
    induce disease progression
  • Bacterial interactions may be beneficial to the
    host

24
Virulent Clonal Types of Pathogens
  • Multiple clonal types within a pathogenic species
  • Clonal types differ in pathogenicity (A.a.)
  • Some clonal types are associated with health and
    others with disease

25
Regulation by the Local Environment
  • Strains of many species may turn virulence
    factors on/off, depending on the nature of
    their environment
  • Temperature
  • ? subgingival
  • ? new attachment loss (appears)
  • Iron
  • Calcium
  • Magnesium
  • Osmolarity

26
Conclusions
  • For a disease to result from a pathogen
  • Be a virulent clonal type
  • Must possess chromosomal/extrachromosomal genetic
    factors to initiate disease
  • Host must be susceptible to pathogens
  • Pathogen must be in numbers sufficient to exceed
    threshold for the host
  • Must be located in the right place
  • Other bacterial species must foster or at least
    not to inhibit the process
  • Local environment must be favorable to disease
    expression
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