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Case Reports
Subgingival microbiome dynamic alteration associated with necrotizing periodontal disease: A case report.
- Jia Jia, You Zhou, Xinwen Wang, and Yuan Liu.
- Lanzhou Hospital of Stomatology, Lanzhou, Gansu Province.
- Medicine (Baltimore). 2021 Feb 26; 100 (8): e24311e24311.
RationaleNecrotizing periodontal diseases (NPDs) are a group of infectious diseases varying in severity, and microorganisms are responsible for these diseases. Currently, the oral microbiota in early disease has been poorly investigated; thus, the causative pathogen and dynamic alteration of the microbiome in NPDs remain unclear.Patient ConcernsWe report a case of a 33-year-old female patient with severe gingival pain and localized necrotizing ulcerative gingival lesions. Conventional therapy was performed, but the necrotizing lesion continued to develop.DiagnosesX-ray examination showed marginal alveolar bone loss in the involved teeth. Histological examination of a biopsy from the gingival lesion showed chronic inflammatory cell infiltration in the tissue, and no cancer cells were observed. Subgingival swabs were taken from the ulcerative gingiva and the gingiva that was not yet affected, and the composition of the microbiota was analyzed by targeted pyrosequencing of the V3-V4 hypervariable regions of the small subunit ribosomal RNA. We found that Neisseria spp., Corynebacterium spp., and Prevotella spp. were clearly enriched in the lesion site. However, Fusobacteria was more abundant in the not-yet-affected gingiva, and Leptotrichia spp. were the most abundant phylotype.InterventionsAfter clinical assessment, a tooth with poor prognosis was extracted, and minocycline hydrochloride was locally administered in the involved tooth pocket every day. Additionally, the patient received 100 mg of hydrochloric acid doxycycline twice per day.OutcomesRemarkable improvement was obtained after 3 days, and the lesion completely healed after 1 week. The follow-up examination 1 year later showed a complete recovery with no recurrent episodes of pain.LessonsChanges in the subgingival microbiome can occurr before clinical symptoms appears, and Fusobacteria may be involved in the imbalance of the subgingival flora in the early stage of NPDs. Moreover, Neisseria is a potential bacterial candidate that deserves further study.Copyright © 2021 the Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.
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