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- Title
Microbiological aspects of an in situ model to study effects of antimicrobial agents on dental plaque ecology.
- Authors
Giertsen, Elin; Guggenheim, Bernhard; Thurnheer, Thomas; Gmür, Rudolf
- Abstract
This study validates an in situ model for ecological studies of dental plaque exposed to various antimicrobial agents with different modes of action on plaque bacteria. Eleven subjects wore two acrylic appliances, each containing two bovine enamel discs, during two 1-wk test periods. Using a split-mouth crossover design, the appliances were dipped twice daily for 1 min into water (control; treatment A), fluoride (26.3 mM NaF; B), zinc acetate (20.0 mM; C), or fluoride plus zinc acetate (D). Four of the subjects used also chlorhexidine diacetate (2.2 mM; E) and chlorhexidine plus fluoride (F). At the end of each period, plaque was collected from the discs, after which the microbiota were analyzed by culture, automated quantitative immunofluorescence, and a viability fluorescence stain. As compared to control, treatments B, C, and D resulted in a significant reduction of individual taxa as detected by immunofluorescence, whereas similar bacterial viability and total bacterial numbers were observed. In contrast, chlorhexidine significantly reduced bacterial viability, total cell numbers, and the abundance of most of the enumerated taxa. We conclude that this in situ model is well suited to study effects of antimicrobial agents on dental plaque ecology. Combined with viability testing, immunofluorescence is obviously superior to culture in detecting taxa-specific shifts caused by antimicrobial agents.
- Subjects
DENTAL plaque; ANTI-infective agents; IMMUNOFLUORESCENCE
- Publication
European Journal of Oral Sciences, 2000, Vol 108, Issue 5, p403
- ISSN
0909-8836
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1034/j.1600-0722.2000.108005403.x