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Journal ArticleDOI

Development of gingivitis in pre-school children and young adults. A comparative experimental study.

Lars Matsson
- 01 Mar 1978 - 
- Vol. 5, Iss: 1, pp 24-34
TLDR
In this article, a comparative study of pre-school children and young adults was made with objective registration methods to confirm the existence of a difference in the propensity to develop gingivitis when oral hygiene is abandoned.
Abstract
Earlier studies suggest that children and adults differ in the propensity to develop gingivitis when oral hygiene is abandoned. To confirm the existence of such a difference, a comparative study of pre-school children and young adults was made with objective registration methods. The author performed all registrations. After a period of intensive oral hygiene, all cleaning of teeth was discontinued for 21 days. The amount of bacterial plaque, the amount of gingival exudate and crevicular leukocytes and the bleeding tendency were registered on days 0, 7, 14 and 21. During the experiment the amount of bacterial plaque increased continously in both groups. The amount of gingival exudate and the tendency to gingival bleeding increased to high values in the adults, while only a small rise was seen in the children. The amount of crevicular leukocytes increased in both groups, but the increment was greater in the adults. A comparison concerning differences in gingival exudate and bleeding tendency between pre-school children and adults was undertaken for gingival units that showed a similar plaque development. Under these statistically acceptable prerequisites, it was shown that there is a real difference in the tendency to develop gingivitis between pre-school children and adults.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Clinical and microbiological effects of subgingival restorations with overhanging or clinically perfect margins

TL;DR: Changes in the subgingival microflora after the placement of restorations with overhanging margins document a potential mechanism for the initiation of periodontal disease associated with iatrogenic factors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dentists are innocent! "Everyday" bacteremia is the real culprit: a review and assessment of the evidence that dental surgical procedures are a principal cause of bacterial endocarditis in children

TL;DR: The data on postprocedure bleeding and bacteremia show that there is no relationship between bleeding andBST, and the value of antibiotic prophylaxis prior to dental treatment is questioned.
Journal ArticleDOI

Exploring the oral microbiota of children at various developmental stages of their dentition in the relation to their oral health

TL;DR: The potential role of P. catoniae and N. flavescens as oral health markers should be assessed in large-scale clinical studies and the combination of both, open-ended and targeted molecular approaches provides information that will increase the understanding of the interplay between the human host and its microbiome.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bacteriology of Human Gingivitis

TL;DR: Data indicated that the flora of healthy sites within a mouth is influenced by the number of inflamed sites, which argues against independence of sites bacteriologically, and suggests that increased serum and blood in the gingival crevice encourage species that relate to periodontitis.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Periodontal Disease in Pregnancy II. Correlation Between Oral Hygiene and Periodontal Condition

TL;DR: In this paper, the correlation between oral hygiene and periodontal condition was investigated in the context of pregnant women with Periodontal Disease in Pregnancy II (PDI II).
Journal ArticleDOI

Periodontal disease in pregnancy. i. prevalence and severity.

TL;DR: (1963).
Journal ArticleDOI

Experimental gingivitis in man. II. A longitudinal clinical and bacteriological investigation.

TL;DR: It was found that mild gingivitis could be diagnosed clinically at approximately the same time as the complex flora was established and sub-clinical inflammation started much earlier, probably as a reaction to the first phases of plaque development.
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