AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined the presence of protozoans and certain bacteria in patients with periodontitis before and after scaling and root planing (SRP) treatment.
  • It involved sampling subgingival microbiota from different sites in 30 patients with periodontitis and 30 healthy controls, using specific detection methods for microbes.
  • Results indicated certain protozoans and bacteria were more prevalent in periodontitis patients, with a decrease in specific protozoans after SRP, though no clear correlation was found between their elimination and clinical improvement.

Article Abstract

: In patients with periodontitis, identification of protozoans and evaluation of some bacteria and clinical parameters associated and assessment of scaling and root planing (SRP) impact on their detection. : Before and after SRP, subgingival microbiota was collected in two pathological and one healthy site from 30 periodontitis patients. One healthy site from 30 control patients was also sampled. The usual clinical periodontal parameters were recorded; microbial detection was determined by PCR hybridization system for bacteria and qPCR for protozoans. : In periodontitis group, and two subtypes of (ST1 and a variant ST2) were detected in respectively 33.3%, 70% and 18.3% of pathological samples, and in 6.7%, 10% and 3.3% healthy samples. In control group, ST1 alone was found in 3.3% of individuals. ST1 was associated with Gingival Index, Clinical Attachment Level (p ≤ 0.03) and with the total bacterial count (p = 0.02). alone was associated with and (p ≤ 0,02). After therapy, only detection decreased significantly (p = 0.004) and no association between the protozoan elimination and improvement of pathological sites was found. : Protozoans were associated with some clinical parameters and/or periodontopathogens in patients with periodontitis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6882485PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/20002297.2019.1693222DOI Listing

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