Traditional sampling methods for the diagnosis of oral candidosis in head and neck cancer patients, i.e. saliva collection or tongue scrapings, are often impossible to perform. The aim was to determine the optimal sampling method. Eighteen oral cancer patients and five control subjects were sampled semi-quantitatively from the labial sulcus, dorsum of the tongue, dental plaque and saliva for cultivation of yeasts. The patients were examined prior to all cancer treatment (n=5), or 2-4 weeks (n=5) or 8-12 weeks (n=8) post-operatively. The incidence of Candida was found to increase from 40 % at the control and pre-operative level up to 73 % 8-12 weeks post-operatively. Candida albicans was found to be the only species until 4 weeks post-operatively. Thereafter, the incidence of species other than C. albicans was 38 %. The most sensitive sampling site was found to be the vestibular sulcus, from which all culture-positive cases could be confirmed. Tongue surface scraping was found to be more sensitive than saliva collection in detecting Candida. All sampling methods and sites were equally sensitive in detecting the different Candida species. Dental plaque was found to have the highest density of Candida colonization, and was thus found to be the most significant source of Candida infection, which emphasizes the role of dental care in these patients.
The finding of these virus-recognition-related genes in odontoblasts strengthens the view that odontoblasts participate in the immune response of the dentine-pulp complex.
Toll-like receptors (TLRs) and nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB) in keratinocytes play an important role in dermatological autoimmune diseases. Tumour suppressor protein p53 regulates TLR expression. The aim of this study was to compare the expression of TLR1-TLR10, p53 and NF-κB in patients with oral lichenoid disease (OLD) with healthy mucosa. Oral mucosal biopsies from 24 patients with OLD and 26 healthy controls (HC) were analysed for the expression of TLR1-TLR10, NF-κB and p53 by immunohistochemistry. The expression of all TLRs was increased in OLD epithelia compared to HC samples and the difference was significant in TLR1, TLR3, TLR4, TLR5, TLR6 and TLR7. In the basement membrane zone, the immunoreactivity of TLR5 was significantly more intense in OLD compared to HC. In the intermediate layer, the immunoreactivity of NF-κB was significantly stronger in OLD, whereas the staining for p53 was more intense in all layers of OLD compared to HC samples. In OLD, a positive correlation between TLR2 and NF-κB in the basal layer and between TLR5, p53 and NF-κB in the intermediate layers was discovered. The expression of TLRs, p53 and NF-κB is increased in OLD, which may play a role in the pathogenesis of this chronic immune-mediated mucosal disease.
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