Presence of microorganisms on the fitting denture complete surface: study ‘in vivo’
Identifieur interne : 006866 ( Istex/Curation ); précédent : 006865; suivant : 006867Presence of microorganisms on the fitting denture complete surface: study ‘in vivo’
Auteurs : P. Monsenego [France]Source :
- Journal of Oral Rehabilitation [ 0305-182X ] ; 2000-08.
Descripteurs français
- Wicri :
- topic : Micro-organisme.
English descriptors
- KwdEn :
- Aerobic, Aerobic staphylococci, Aerobic streptococci, Anaerobic, Anaerobic bacteria, Bacterial adhesion, Bacterial counts, Blackwell science, Cell suspension, Composite surfaces, Denture, Denture surface, Microbial, Microorganism, Monsenego, Mucosal, Mucosal sites, Mucosal surface, Oral rehabilitation, Palatal mucosa, Plaque, Prosthetic dentistry, Right half, Staphylococci, Streptococci, Theilade, Tting, Tting denture surface, Tting surface, Unglazed, Untreated, Untreated acrylic resin, Untreated surface.
- Teeft :
- Aerobic, Aerobic staphylococci, Aerobic streptococci, Anaerobic, Anaerobic bacteria, Bacterial adhesion, Bacterial counts, Blackwell science, Cell suspension, Composite surfaces, Denture, Denture surface, Microbial, Microorganism, Monsenego, Mucosal, Mucosal sites, Mucosal surface, Oral rehabilitation, Palatal mucosa, Plaque, Prosthetic dentistry, Right half, Staphylococci, Streptococci, Theilade, Tting, Tting denture surface, Tting surface, Unglazed, Untreated, Untreated acrylic resin, Untreated surface.
Abstract
It was the intention to study if glazing the fitting surface of maxillary dentures with a light‐curing acrylic resin would diminish the bacterial counts. The study included the application of a photopolymerizing glaze to one half of the fitting denture surface; after 15 days microbial plaque was collected from a 1 cm2 area of the glazed and the untreated resin, respectively. At the same time bacteria were collected from a 1 cm2 area of the corresponding sites on the palatal mucosa. The application of the glaze had modified the number of bacteria cultured from the glazed surface versus the untreated surface. Denture surface: total aerobic bacteria, 1:4; aerobic streptococci, 1:4; aerobic staphylococci, 1:5; anaerobic bacteria, 1:3·5; mucosal surface aerobic bacteria, 1:4; streptococcal, 1:4. The differences were statistically significant at P<0·002. However, from a quantitative and qualitative point of view these differences were minor compared with the actual concentrations of the microorganisms of 104–106/cm2 observed on the fitting denture surface and the palatal mucosa.
Url:
DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2842.2000.00564.x
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ISTEX:D2A1F1C3328EC9B12D3B9AB76180E6BE36C740A9Le document en format XML
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<affiliation wicri:level="1"><mods:affiliation>Department of Prosthetic Dentistry, U.F.R. of Dental Surgery of Paris 7, Denis‐Diderot, France</mods:affiliation>
<country xml:lang="fr">France</country>
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<series><title level="j" type="main">Journal of Oral Rehabilitation</title>
<title level="j" type="alt">JOURNAL ORAL REHABILITATION</title>
<idno type="ISSN">0305-182X</idno>
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<profileDesc><textClass><keywords scheme="KwdEn" xml:lang="en"><term>Aerobic</term>
<term>Aerobic staphylococci</term>
<term>Aerobic streptococci</term>
<term>Anaerobic</term>
<term>Anaerobic bacteria</term>
<term>Bacterial adhesion</term>
<term>Bacterial counts</term>
<term>Blackwell science</term>
<term>Cell suspension</term>
<term>Composite surfaces</term>
<term>Denture</term>
<term>Denture surface</term>
<term>Microbial</term>
<term>Microorganism</term>
<term>Monsenego</term>
<term>Mucosal</term>
<term>Mucosal sites</term>
<term>Mucosal surface</term>
<term>Oral rehabilitation</term>
<term>Palatal mucosa</term>
<term>Plaque</term>
<term>Prosthetic dentistry</term>
<term>Right half</term>
<term>Staphylococci</term>
<term>Streptococci</term>
<term>Theilade</term>
<term>Tting</term>
<term>Tting denture surface</term>
<term>Tting surface</term>
<term>Unglazed</term>
<term>Untreated</term>
<term>Untreated acrylic resin</term>
<term>Untreated surface</term>
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<term>Aerobic staphylococci</term>
<term>Aerobic streptococci</term>
<term>Anaerobic</term>
<term>Anaerobic bacteria</term>
<term>Bacterial adhesion</term>
<term>Bacterial counts</term>
<term>Blackwell science</term>
<term>Cell suspension</term>
<term>Composite surfaces</term>
<term>Denture</term>
<term>Denture surface</term>
<term>Microbial</term>
<term>Microorganism</term>
<term>Monsenego</term>
<term>Mucosal</term>
<term>Mucosal sites</term>
<term>Mucosal surface</term>
<term>Oral rehabilitation</term>
<term>Palatal mucosa</term>
<term>Plaque</term>
<term>Prosthetic dentistry</term>
<term>Right half</term>
<term>Staphylococci</term>
<term>Streptococci</term>
<term>Theilade</term>
<term>Tting</term>
<term>Tting denture surface</term>
<term>Tting surface</term>
<term>Unglazed</term>
<term>Untreated</term>
<term>Untreated acrylic resin</term>
<term>Untreated surface</term>
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<keywords scheme="Wicri" type="topic" xml:lang="fr"><term>Micro-organisme</term>
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<front><div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">It was the intention to study if glazing the fitting surface of maxillary dentures with a light‐curing acrylic resin would diminish the bacterial counts. The study included the application of a photopolymerizing glaze to one half of the fitting denture surface; after 15 days microbial plaque was collected from a 1 cm2 area of the glazed and the untreated resin, respectively. At the same time bacteria were collected from a 1 cm2 area of the corresponding sites on the palatal mucosa. The application of the glaze had modified the number of bacteria cultured from the glazed surface versus the untreated surface. Denture surface: total aerobic bacteria, 1:4; aerobic streptococci, 1:4; aerobic staphylococci, 1:5; anaerobic bacteria, 1:3·5; mucosal surface aerobic bacteria, 1:4; streptococcal, 1:4. The differences were statistically significant at P<0·002. However, from a quantitative and qualitative point of view these differences were minor compared with the actual concentrations of the microorganisms of 104–106/cm2 observed on the fitting denture surface and the palatal mucosa.</div>
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