Abstract

A study was conducted to assess the influence of fixed appliances on the mutans streptococcal in a group of patients receiving orthodontic treatment. Mutans streptococcal counts in stimulated saliva of 27 patients were obtained at baseline, and at 1-month intervals for 4 months. The difference in mutans streptococcal counts at baseline and at the 4-month sampling was less than an order of magnitude in 18 of the patients, between 1 and 2 orders of magnitude in eight of the patients, and 3 orders of magnitude in one patient. Restriction endonuclease digests of genomic DNA from representative mutans streptococci isolates taken from baseline and 4-month saliva samples, as well as from 4-month tooth and appliance surfaces, were examined by pulsed field gel electrophoresis, after restriction endonuclease digestion. Results of the DNA banding patterns associated with isolates from 19 patients showed that, for 12 patients, all isolates examined represented the same clone of Streptococcus mutans, whereas for six patients two different S. mutans clones were detected. One patient yielded three different clones of S. mutans. A much larger number of baseline, as well as post-appliance, isolates will have to be examined from each patient in future studies, in order to determine if the number of different S. mutans clones harbored by individual patients is related to orthodontic treatment.

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