Publications by authors named "Nyfors S"

Article Synopsis
  • The study observed the prevalence of salivary beta-lactamase activity (SbetaA) in infants and its connection to beta-lactamase-producing bacteria in their saliva.
  • At 6 months old, 46% of infants showed SbetaA, with a high correlation between SbetaA positivity and the presence of beta+ bacteria.
  • By 12 months, SbetaA was found in 54% of infants, and exposure to antibiotics during infancy increased the likelihood of having SbetaA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Our aim was to investigate the occurrence of bacteremia associated with removal of a semirigid osteosynthesis plate and an adjacent third molar. Ten patients with fixed mandibular angle fracture were bacteriologically sampled from the second molar's distal gingival pocket, from the third molar's extraction socket and from the osteosynthesis plate. Blood samples from the ante-cubital vein were taken 10 times until 30 min postoperatively.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Our aim was to investigate bacteremia caused by surgical extraction of partly erupted mandibular third molars. From 16 young adults, bacterial samples were taken from the third-molar pericoronal pocket and post-operatively from the extraction socket, and blood samples were drawn from the ante-cubital vein up to 30 min after surgery. Of the subjects, 88% had detectable bacteremia-50% 1 min after the incision, 44% immediately after extraction.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Veillonella spp. are early colonizing inhabitants in the mouth. As part of studies on penicillin resistance among oral indigenous anaerobic microbiota in childhood, the aim of the present longitudinal study was to examine the emergence of resistant strains in Veillonella populations.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Penicillin resistance due to beta-lactamase production is surprisingly common among oral bacteria in childhood. Fusobacterium nucleatum, a Gram-negative anaerobic bacillus, is a member of the developing oral commensal flora. As part of the investigation on the emergence of oral bacterial resistance, the aim of the present study was to examine longitudinally the penicillin resistance among salivary F.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Many human colonic facultative anaerobic and aerobic bacteria are capable of alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH)-mediated ethanol oxidation. In this bacteriocolonic pathway for ethanol oxidation intracolonic ethanol is first oxidized by bacterial ADHs to acetaldehyde, which is further oxidized by either colonic mucosal or bacterial aldehyde dehydrogenases to acetate. The produced acetaldehyde is a highly toxic and carcinogenic agent.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The frequency of beta-lactamase production in gram-negative bacteria has increased considerably during recent years. In this study, beta-lactamase production by oral anaerobic gram-negative rods isolated from saliva was longitudinally examined for 44 Caucasian infants at the ages of 2, 6, and 12 months in relation to their documented exposure to antibiotics. Isolates showing decreased susceptibility to penicillin G (1 microg/ml) were examined for beta-lactamase production by using a chromogenic cephalosporin disk test.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The frequency of beta-lactamase production by oral pigmented Prevotella species isolated from 23 healthy young children and the minimal inhibitory concentrations (MICs) for 186 available beta-lactamase-positive isolates were examined by using the chromogenic cephalosporin disk test (AB BIODISK, Solna, Sweden) and the Etest (AB BIODISK) and/or the agar dilution method of the National Committee for Clinical Laboratory Standards (Villanova, PA, USA), respectively. beta-Lactamase-positive Prevotella melaninogenica strains were isolated from all children, and more than two-thirds of the Prevotella denticola and Prevotella loescheii strains isolated from the children were beta-lactamase-positive. The beta-lactamase-producing Prevotella intermedia group consisted of Prevotella nigrescens and the P.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF