Subgingival plaque microbiota in HIV positive patients
Publisher
: Blackwell Synergy
Summary :Aim: To describe and compare the predominant bacterial and fungal species
associated with gingivitis, periodontitis, and linear gingival erythema (LGE), in HIV
positive subjects with different immune status.
Methods: Viral loads and CD4 levels determined HIV disease status. From pooled
subgingival plaque, 16S and 18S rDNA were cloned and sequenced to determine
species identity.
Results: One hundred and nine bacterial species were identified from 14 subjects.
Nearly half of the species were not cultivable. Notably, the classical putative
periodontal pathogens, Treponema denticola, Porphyromonas gingivalis and
Tannerella forsythia were below the limit of detection and were not detected. Species
of Gemella, Dialister, Streptococcus and Veillonella were predominant. In one HIV
positive subject with periodontitis and low viral load, Gemella morbillorum, a known
opportunistic pathogen, constituted 84% of the clones. Saccharomyces cerevisiae was
the only fungal species detected in an LGE subject and in periodontitis subjects with
high viral loads. In periodontitis patients with low viral loads, Candida albicans was
predominant, while S. cerevisiae was only a minor component.
Conclusion: These case studies suggest that other bacterial species, rather than the
classical periodontal pathogens, may be involved in periodontal diseases of subjects
with HIV. These data are indicative of opportunistic infections in a highly susceptible
immunocompromised host.
Copies :
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08194248 |
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TIDAK DIPINJAMKAN |