Lecture 6 questions Flashcards
what is quorum sensing?
a bunch of signaling compounds that mediate intercellular communication
why don’t antibiotics work on breakdown of biofilm?
- antibiotics work on dividing cells, and division slows down after the biofilm thickens and creates a capsule
- exo-polymers prevent charges molecules from coming into deeper zones and diffusing biofilm
- extracellular enzymes (beta-lactamases, etc) inactivate antibiotics
- after a few days of the antibiotic, gene transfer can make you resistant to the drug
how do we best target biofilm?
brushing correctly, and using non-contract brushing like with high powered water or air (waterpik)
why do we not wanna rely on antibiotic sensitivity testing?
gene transfer can cause resistance to the antibiotic and there will be very little return for the patient’s money (~$200)
what can happen in guided tissue regeneration (GTR)?
bacteria can infect membranes and implants can be colonized when healing (peri-implant disease)
is plaque a contagious or infectious agent?
infectious
what are gingivitis and periodontitis considered?
non-communicable infectious diseases
what are the 4 plaque hypotheses?
non-specific plaque hypothesis
specific plaque hypothesis
ecological plaque hypothesis
oral dysbiosis (aka keystone hypothesis)
describe the non-specific plaque hypothesis?
this is the study where they followed a bunch of isolated Sri lankan tea workers for 17 years and gave them no access to healthcare which is super unethical but ANYWAYS they found that 80% of the population had an average of 0.2mm of attachment loss per year, 11% of the population had 2mm of attachment loss per year (so they lost more of their teeth by their 40’s) and 8% of the population had no attachment loss even with a ton of plaque and gingiva
- so they decided that any sub gingival bacteria causes inflammation and can lead to disease… “all bacteria are bad therefore when you see plaque, remove it”
describe the specific plaque hypothesis
not all bacteria in plaque are bad. the microbial sites in diseased areas are different from ones in healthy areas
describe the ecological plaque hypothesis
if you change the ecosystem, it will DIE. there’s a line between gingival health and gingivitis. essentially, it’s a numbers game, where you might always have the same types of bacteria but in different levels, depending on whether you have disease.
- gingival health: low plaque, low inflammation, low GCF flow, facultative anaerobes, gram + microflora
- gingivitis: high plaque, high inflammation, high GCF flow, obligate anaerobes, gram - microflora
describe oral dysbiosis or the keystone hypothesis
a new or extra species can cause tissue destruction. a “community activist” bacteria can bring in and connect to another new bacteria and this new bacteria causes a bunch of damage. the activist itself isn’t bad, but when it connects to the new species, bad things happen. (F. nuc found in smokers, P. gingivalis in nonsmokers)
what do you need for disease initiation and progression?
virulent perio pathogen, a vulnerable local environment (such as an area that has a bunch of iron from gingival inflammation), and host susceptibility (with HIV, diabetes, smoking, etc)
which perio pathogens are primarily health colonizers?
- S. mitis, S. oralis, S. sanguis
Streptococcus species: S. gordonii and S. intermedius - E. corrodens, C. gingivalis, C. sputigena, C. ochracea, C. concisus, A. actino a
- V. parvula and A. odontolyticus
- actinomyces species
what complex bacteria are in patients with periodontitis (tertiary)?
P. gingivalis
B. forsythus
T. denticola