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Microbial shifts during dental biofilm re-development in the absence of oral hygiene in periodontal health and disease.

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TLDR
Uzel et al. as mentioned in this paper monitored microbial shifts during dental biofilm re-development in the absence of oral hygiene in periodontal health and disease and found that the total supra-and subgingival counts of Veillonella parvula, Fusobacterium nucleatum ss vincentii and Neisseria mucosa increased from 2 to 7 days.
Abstract
Uzel NG, Teles FR, Teles RP, Song XQ, Torresyap G, Socransky SS, Haffajee AD. Microbial shifts during dental biofilm re-development in the absence of oral hygiene in periodontal health and disease. J Clin Peridontol 2011; doi: 10.1111/j.1600-051X.2011.01730.x. Abstract Aim: To monitor microbial shifts during dental biofilm re-development. Materials and methods: Supra- and subgingival plaque samples were taken separately from 28 teeth in 38 healthy and 17 periodontitis subjects at baseline and immediately after tooth cleaning. Samples were taken again from seven teeth in randomly selected quadrants during 1, 2, 4 and 7 days of no oral hygiene. Samples were analysed using checkerboard DNA–DNA hybridization. Species counts were averaged within subjects at each time point. Significant differences in the counts between healthy and periodontitis subjects were determined using the Mann–Whitney test. Results: The total supra- and subgingival counts were significantly higher in periodontitis on entry and reached or exceeded the baseline values after day 2. Supragingival counts of Veillonella parvula, Fusobacterium nucleatum ss vincentii and Neisseria mucosa increased from 2 to 7 days. Subgingival counts were greater for Actinomyces, green and orange complex species. Significant differences between groups in supragingival counts occurred for 17 of 41 species at entry, 0 at day 7; for subgingival plaque, these values were 39/41 taxa at entry, 17/41 at day 7. Conclusions: Supragingival plaque re-development was similar in periodontitis and health, but subgingival species recolonization was more marked in periodontitis.

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Citations
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Lessons learned and unlearned in periodontal microbiology.

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The subgingival periodontal microbiota of the aging mouth

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Early microbial succession in redeveloping dental biofilms in periodontal health and disease

TL;DR: There is a defined order in bacterial species succession in early supragingival and subgingival biofilm redevelopment after professional cleaning, and no significant increase in the proportions of periodontal pathogens was observed in any of the clinical groups or locations.
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Patterns of Oral Microbiota Diversity in Adults and Children: A Crowdsourced Population Study.

TL;DR: Citizen-scientists used a crowdsourcing model to obtain oral bacterial composition data from guests at the Denver Museum of Nature & Science to determine if previously suspected oral microbiome associations with an individual’s demographics, lifestyle, and/or genetics are robust and generalizable enough to be detected within a general population.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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Microbial complexes in subgingival plaque

TL;DR: The purpose of the present investigation was to attempt to define communities using data from large numbers of plaque samples and different clustering and ordination techniques, which related strikingly to clinical measures of periodontal disease particularly pocket depth and bleeding on probing.
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Periodontal microbial ecology.

TL;DR: This manuscript is a brief primer on microbial ecology, because, although the importance of microbial ecology in periodontal diseases is widely recognized, most of us do not know precisely what the term means.
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Reduced plaque formation by the chloromethyl analogue of victamine C.

TL;DR: Whether the chloromethyl analogue of Victamine C reduces the formation of dental plaque considered a precursor of calculus is determined.
Journal Article

"Checkerboard" DNA-DNA hybridization

TL;DR: The method permits the simultaneous determination of the presence of multiple bacterial species in single or multiple dental plaque samples, thus suggesting its usefulness for a range of clinical or environmental samples.
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