The antifungal drug therapy often employed to treat paracoccidiodomycosis (PCM), an important neglected fungal systemic infection, leads to offensive adverse effects, besides being very long-lasting. In addition, PCM compromises the oral health of patients by leading to oral lesions that are very painful and disabling. In that way, photodynamic therapy (PDT) arises as a new promising adjuvant treatment for inactivating Paracoccidioides brasiliensis (Pb), the responsible fungus for PCM, and also for helping the patients to deal with such debilitating oral lesions. PDT has been linked to an improved microbial killing, also presenting the advantage of not inducing immediate microbial resistance such as drugs. For the present study, we investigated the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) by using the fluorescent probes hydroxyphenyl fluorescein (HPF) and aminophenyl fluorescein (APF) after toluidine blue (TBO-37.5 mg/L)-mediated PDT (660 nm, 40 mW, and 0.04 cm spot area) and the action of TBO-PDT upon Pb cultures grown for 7 or 15 days in semisolid Fava Netto's culture medium; we also targeted oral PCM manifestations by reporting the first clinical cases (three patients) to receive topic PDT for such purpose. We were able to show a significant generation of hydroxyl radicals and hypochlorite after TBO-PDT with doses around 90 J/cm; such ROS generation was particularly useful to attack and inactivate Pb colonies at 7 and 15 days. All three patients reported herein related an immediate relief when it came to pain, mouth opening, and also the ability to chew and swallow. As extracted from our clinical results, which are in fact based on in vitro outcomes, TBO-PDT is a very safe, inexpensive, and promising therapy for the oral manifestations of PCM.
The aim of the present study was to assess whether mothers' sense of coherence (SOC) was a predictor of decline in oral healthrelated quality of life (OHRQoL) of preschoolers. A 3-year cohort study was conducted in Diamantina, Brazil. At baseline, 162 preschoolers aged one to three years were randomly selected from among children registered in local Primary Healthcare Units. In the first stage, mothers completed a sociodemographic questionnaire, the Brazilian version of the Early Childhood Oral Health Impact Scale (B-ECOHIS), and the Brazilian short version of the Sense of Coherence Scale (SOC-13). The total score obtained from the SOC-13 was used to select exposed and unexposed children. Clinical examinations were performed to detect the presence of dental caries, traumatic dental injury, and malocclusion. At follow-up, mothers completed the sociodemographic questionnaire and the B-ECOHIS again. The incidence of severe dental caries and adherence to the proposed treatment at baseline were evaluated. A decline in OHRQoL was considered if there was an increase in the B-ECOHIS score of at least one unit. The chi-square test and Poisson regression were performed. A total of 151 preschoolers participated in the study, among whom 37.7% showed a decline in OHRQoL. Mothers' SOC was not associated with a negative impact on OHRQoL (RR = 1.24; 95%CI = 0.81-1.88), while the incidence of severe dental caries had a greater impact on the decline in OHRQoL (RR = 2.02; 95%CI = 1.29-3.16). Mothers' low SOC was not a predictor of decline in the OHRQoL of preschoolers after a 3-year follow-up period.
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