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Is there bacterial infection in the intact crowns of teeth with pulp necrosis of sickle cell anaemia patients? A case series study nested in a cohort
Author(s) -
Costa C. P. S,
Alves M. S.,
LimaNeto L. G.,
Valois E. M.,
MonteiroNeto V.,
Souza S. F. C.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
international endodontic journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.988
H-Index - 119
eISSN - 1365-2591
pISSN - 0143-2885
DOI - 10.1111/iej.13476
Subject(s) - pulp necrosis , medicine , pulp (tooth) , dentistry , infective endocarditis , necrosis , endodontics , gram staining , prospective cohort study , pathology , bacteria , biology , surgery , genetics
Abstract Aim To evaluate the presence of bacteria in permanent teeth with intact crowns (without caries, periodontal disease or dental trauma) in patients with sickle cell anaemia (HbSS genotype) by analysing their clinical, imaging and microbiological parameters. Methodology This is a case series study nested in a cohort. In the first follow‐up of this cohort study (Journal of Endodontics, 2013, 39, 177), 10 HbSS patients with at least one tooth with an intact crown and clinically diagnosed with pulp necrosis by pulse oximetry adapted for dentistry and a cold pulp sensitivity test ( n  = 27 teeth) were selected. Changes in the pulp chamber, root and periodontal ligament were identified in the tomographic analysis. Bacterial culture, staining for live and dead bacteria, and real‐time polymerase chain reaction with 16S rRNA primers were used to identify the presence of bacteria. Culture sample collection was performed immediately after access to the pulp chamber. The microbiome was analysed with a MiSeq sequencer (Illumina, San Diego, CA). Results The diagnosis of pulp necrosis was confirmed clinically in 82% (22/27) of the teeth. The amount of bacterial load identified was less than 100 copies μL −1 in 23% (5/22) of the teeth with intact crowns and pulp necrosis. Thirteen bacterial species were identified that are commonly found in urinary tract infections, septicaemia and infective endocarditis. Only one of these species, Granulicatella adjacens , has also be found in primary endodontic infections. Conclusion Prospective clinical, imaging and microbiological analyses suggest that pulp necrosis of teeth with intact crowns in HbSS patients is not associated with the presence of bacteria.

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