Seventy children with chronic renal failure (CRF) aged 4-13.6 years were recruited from the Renal Unit of the Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children. Indices were recorded for dental caries, dental plaque, gingival inflammation, gingival enlargement, and enamel defects. Salivary urea, buffering capacity, and the oral streptococcal flora were determined for 25 of the children. A significantly greater proportion of the CRF children was caries free, 40% compared with 8.5% of the controls. The mean plaque score was significantly greater in the CRF group for both the primary 12.7 (16) and permanent dentition 22.0 (18.2) compared with the controls, 5.3 (7.6) and 15.5 (13.3), respectively. Eight CRF children had gingival enlargement. Enamel defects affecting the permanent teeth were observed in 57% of the CRF children compared with 33% of the controls. The buffering capacity was significantly greater in the CRF group, pH 6.4 (0.5) compared with the controls pH 5.6 (0.8). The mean salivary urea level (mmol/l) was significantly greater in the CRF children, 11.6 (5.9) compared with 3.6 (1.4) for the controls. The isolation frequency of Streptococcus mutans was significantly greater from controls compared with the CRF children ( P=0.002). An integrated dental service needs to be developed with emphasis on tooth brushing to prevent gingival hyperplasia and periodontal disease after puberty.
Every effort must be made to ensure that managers have reasonable spans of control that allow them to develop and use the leadership skill necessary for empowering their staff to practice to the full scope of their professional role.
Studies using molecular techniques have demonstrated that a culture-based approach can severely underestimate the bacterial diversity in most environments. One of the molecular techniques that has been applied in microbial ecology is denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE). The purpose of this study was to investigate differences in the microbiota of plaque, using a number of analysis techniques, from children without gingivitis (n ؍ 30) and from those with gingivitis (n ؍ 30). Extracted DNA from gingival margin plaque was subjected to PCR targeting the 16S rRNA gene using universal primers. DGGE profiles were analyzed in three ways. (i) Bacterial diversity was compared between cohorts by using the Shannon-Wiener index (also known as the Shannon-Weaver index). (ii) A hierarchical cluster analysis of the banding patterns was calculated and expressed as a dendrogram. (iii) Individual DGGE bands and their intensities for both cohorts were compared using a logistic regression analysis. The Shannon-Wiener indices demonstrated a greater bacterial diversity associated with no-gingivitis plaque (P ؍ 0.009). Dendrograms demonstrated that seven clades associated with gingivitis and five clades associated with no gingivitis. The logistic regression demonstrated that one band was significantly associated with no gingivitis (P ؍ 0.001), while two bands were significantly associated with gingivitis (P ؍ 0.005 and P ؍ 0.042). In conclusion, this study demonstrates that the development of gingivitis might be accompanied by a decrease in bacterial diversity. Furthermore, we have demonstrated that logistic regression is a good statistical method for analyzing and characterizing DGGE profiles.
The purpose of this work was to investigate the prevalence of dental caries, bacterial dental plaque, gingivitis, enamel defects and caries- related microflora in children with severe haemophilia. Thirty-eight children with severe haemophilia (factor VIII and IX < 2 U dL(-1)) were recruited from Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children and matched for age, gender and ethnicity with healthy control children from the Eastman Dental Institute. Indices were recorded for decayed, missing, and filled teeth and surfaces in both the deciduous dentition (dmfs/dmft) and the permanent dentition (DMFS/DMFT). The plaque and gingivitis scores and developmental enamel defects were also recorded. The caries-related microflora was sampled and cultured for Streptococcus mutans, and Lactobacilli and Candida species. A significantly greater proportion of children with severe haemophilia were caries-free compared with the controls (36.7% vs. 13.3%; P=0.04). Both the DMFS and DMFT were significantly greater in the controls (3.6 and 2.8, respectively) compared with the haemophilia group, (0.8 and 0.7; P=0.007 and P=0.04). The plaque score for the permanent dentition only was significantly greater for the control children (24.2) compared with the haemophilia group, (10.2; P=0.04). The mean number of colony forming units of S. mutans was significantly greater in the control group compared with the haemophilia group (P=0.05). We conclude that children with severe haemophilia have a significantly lower prevalence of dental caries compared with matched, healthy controls.
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