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[Study on Microbial Diversity of Peri-implantitis Subgingival by High-throughput Sequencing]. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to explore the microbial diversity associated with peri-implantitis using high-throughput sequencing methods to understand its microbiological causes.
  • Researchers collected subgingival plaque samples from patients with peri-implantitis and compared them with samples from non-peri-implantitis subjects, identifying significant differences in bacterial communities.
  • Key findings indicated that certain bacteria like Selenomonas and Pseudomonas were prevalent in peri-implantitis cases, while specific bacteria in healthy subjects could influence the disease, highlighting a complex relationship between oral microbial ecosystems and peri-implantitis development.*

Article Abstract

Objective: To study microbial diversity of peri-implantitis subgingival with high-throughput sequencing, and investigate microbiological etiology of peri-implantitis.

Methods: Subgingival plaques were sampled from the patients with peri-implantitis (D group) and non-peri-implantitis subjects (N group). The microbiological diversity of the subgingival plaques was detected by sequencing V4 region of 16S rRNA with Illumina Miseq platform. The diversity of the community structure was analyzed using Mothur software.

Results: A total of 156 507 gene sequences were detected in nine samples and 4 402 operational taxonomic units (OTUs) were found. Selenomonas, Pseudomonas, and Fusobacterium were dominant bacteria in D group, while Fusobacterium, Veillonella and Streptococcus were dominant bacteria in N group. Differences between peri-implantitis and non-peri-implantitis bacterial communities were observed at all phylogenetic levels by LEfSe, which was also found in PcoA test.

Conclusion: The occurrence of peri-implantitis is not only related to periodontitis pathogenic microbe, but also related with the changes of oral microbial community structure. Treponema, Herbaspirillum, Butyricimonas and Phaeobacte may be closely related to the occurrence and development of peri-implantitis.

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