AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to investigate the presence of a specific pathogen and its JP2 genotype in 200 Western Australians with periodontitis.
  • A total of 220 patients provided various oral samples for analysis, which showed a 28.18% prevalence of the pathogen, with higher rates in unstimulated saliva compared to cheek swabs and subgingival plaque.
  • Key risk factors for severe periodontitis included younger age, positive family history of periodontal disease, poor oral hygiene, and irregular dental visits, while no JP2 genotype was detected in the cohort.

Article Abstract

Aim: The main purpose of the present study was to investigate the carrier rate of and its JP2 genotype in a cohort of 200 Western Australians diagnosed with periodontitis.

Materials And Methods: In this descriptive cross-sectional study, 220 consecutive patients with periodontitis, aged 18 years and older, were recruited to a specialist periodontal practice in Perth City. Every patient included in this study contributed three different intra-oral samples. Periodontal, radiographical, and microbiological assessments were performed. The samples were analysed using a polymerase chain reaction for the detection of and its JP2 genotype using the primers and conditions described previously. A Chi-square test and logistic regression analysis were performed to evaluate the results.

Results: The prevalence of was 28.18%. The carrier rates of in the unstimulated saliva, cheek swabs, and pooled subgingival plaque samples were 21.80%, 19.50%, and 17.70%, respectively. There was a significant correlation between the severe form of periodontitis (stage IV, grade C) and younger age ( = 0.004), positive family history of periodontitis ( < 0.001), oral hygiene method ( < 0.001), and irregular dental visit attendance ( < 0.001). The binary logistic regression analysis revealed that having severe periodontitis risk increased almost three times in those who were young (OR: 2.812) and came from a family with a history of periodontal disease (OR: 3.194). However, the risk of severe periodontitis was five times higher in those patients with tooth loss due to periodontal disease (OR: 5.071). The highly leukotoxic JP2 genotype of was not detected.

Conclusions: This study of a Western Australian cohort confirmed the low presence of and the complete absence of its JP2 genotype. Young age, family history of periodontal disease, lack of flossing, irregular dental visits, and tooth loss due to periodontitis were identified as potential risk factors for periodontitis stage IV, grade C in this cohort.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11596974PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms12112354DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to investigate the presence of a specific pathogen and its JP2 genotype in 200 Western Australians with periodontitis.
  • A total of 220 patients provided various oral samples for analysis, which showed a 28.18% prevalence of the pathogen, with higher rates in unstimulated saliva compared to cheek swabs and subgingival plaque.
  • Key risk factors for severe periodontitis included younger age, positive family history of periodontal disease, poor oral hygiene, and irregular dental visits, while no JP2 genotype was detected in the cohort.
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Aggressive forms of periodontitis, especially in young patients, are often associated with an increased proportion of the Gram-negative bacterium of the microbiota of the affected periodontal sites. One of the virulence factors of is a leukotoxin (LtxA) that induces a pro-inflammatory cell death process in leukocytes. exhibits a large genetic diversity and different genotypes vary in LtxA production capacity.

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The Gram-positive bacterium, is an oral pathogen, and approximately 50% of known strains encode a recently identified repeat-in-toxin (RTX) protein, FtxA. By assessing a longitudinal Ghanaian study population of adolescents (10-19 years of age; mean age 13.2 years), we recently discovered a possible correlation between deep periodontal pockets measured at the two-year follow-up, presence of the gene, and a high quantity of .

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Bacteriome analysis of -JP2 genotype-associated Grade C periodontitis in Moroccan adolescents.

Front Oral Health

November 2023

Department of Periodontology and Oral Implantology, Maurice H. Kornberg School of Dentistry, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA, United States.

Background: Grade C (previously aggressive) periodontitis (GCP) in adolescents is prevalent in certain parts of Africa where it is associated with JP2 genotype, a highly virulent strain of . The aim of this study was to characterize the subgingival bacteriome in Moroccan subjects with GCP positive to JP2 genotype.

Methods: Subgingival plaque samples were collected from shallow and deep pockets of 8 subjects with GCP (17.

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The aims of the present study were to document the presence of and the emerging oral pathogen , as well as to identify genotypes of these bacterial species with enhanced virulence. In addition, these data were analyzed in relation to periodontal pocket depth (PPD) and the progression of PPD from the sampled periodontal sites during a two-year period. Subgingival plaque samples were collected from 172 periodontal pockets of 68 Ghanaian adolescents.

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