AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to examine the relationship between the composition of the microbiome in primary endodontic infections and various clinical or radiographic factors in 71 patients.
  • Samples were collected and analyzed using advanced sequencing techniques, while clinical factors like percussion tenderness and sinus tract presence were evaluated, alongside radiographic data from different periapical index categories.
  • Results indicated no significant differences in microbiome composition based on clinical factors; however, larger periapical lesions were associated with specific increases in certain bacteria, suggesting that community composition is influenced primarily by the size of the radiographic lesions rather than clinical symptoms.

Article Abstract

Objective: To analyze if the microbiome community composition in primary endodontic infections is associated with clinical or radiographic factors.

Materials And Methods: Seventy-one patients with primary endodontic infections were evaluated for percussion tenderness, presence of a sinus tract, presence of caries, sex, probing depth > 4 mm, and age. Samples from the root canals were obtained and the microbiome was subsequently characterized by 16 S rRNA amplicon sequencing. For the radiographic analysis, a subset of 12 samples with a periapical index (PAI) ≤ 2 were compared with 19 samples with PAI of 5. The Shannon and Chao1 indices were used to measure alpha diversity. Differences in abundances of genera were evaluated using the Kruskal-Wallis test with Bonferroni's correction. Differences in community composition were evaluated using analysis of similarity (ANOSIM) with Bray-Curtis dissimilarity matrices.

Results: No significant differences in microbiome composition relative to clinical factors were found using ANOSIM. Teeth within the two categories of periapical index showed a similar number of species richness, and alpha diversity values P > 0.05. Community composition was significantly affected by the periapical index (ANOSIM P = 0.039, R = 0.10). Larger radiographic lesions demonstrated significant increase in Prevotellaceae, Olsenella, and the motile bacteria Oribacterium, Selenomonadaceae spp., and Treponema.

Conclusion: Clinical factors associated with apical periodontitis have a limited impact on the root canal microbiome composition. Community composition appears to be affected in teeth with large apical lesions.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00784-024-05982-yDOI Listing

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