Abstract

To test the hypothesis that Helicobacter pylori may be transmitted by the oral-oral route, we applied nested PCR and DNA sequencing to detect and analyze H. pylori DNA in the oral cavity of 20 adult patients undergoing endoscopy. Dental plaques of molars, premolars, and incisors and saliva were collected. Additional paraffin-embedded gastric biopsies were analyzed in four patients. Two sets of highly sensitive and specific primers, EHC-U/EHC-L and ET5-U/ET-5L directed to a 860-bp fragment of H. pylori DNA, were used in the nested PCR. Eight patients had an active infection in the stomach determined with the [13C]urea breath test and the other 12 were negative. Nested PCR showed that all 20 subjects (100%) were positive for H. pylori in the oral cavity. DNA sequencing demonstrated that all tested PCR products of the expected size from the oral samples have more than 97% identity with that from H. pylori type strain ATCC 43629. However, sequences differed in oral samples from different subjects as well as between different oral locations and gastric biopsies within the same individuals. In conclusion, the oral cavity may be a permanent reservoir for H. pylori and can harbor multiple H. pylori strains at the same time.

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