Abstract

This report describes the first results of an ongoing study of bacteremia after endodontic treatment of teeth with Asymptomatic apical periodontitis. After access cavity preparation, microbiological samples were taken from the root canal under aseptic conditions in 4 single-rooted teeth in 4 patients. In treatment of 2 of the patients, the first 3 reamers (sizes 15-25) were deliberately used to a level 2 mm beyond the apical foramen. In 2 patients the instrumentation ended inside the root canal 1 mm short of the apical foramen. Blood samples were taken from the patients during the endodontic instrumentation and 10 min after the treatment was completed. Using lysis-filtration under anaerobic conditions, the blood was passed through a cellulose membrane filter. The filters as well as the root canal samples were incubated using an anaerobic technique. Anaerobic bacteria were isolated from all root canals. In the 2 patients where overinstrumentation had occurred, Propionibacterium acnes was recovered both from the root canals and from the blood samples taken during and after the treatment had been completed. Biochemical profiles, antibiotic susceptibility tests and electrophoresis of soluble proteins revealed that Propionibacterium acnes isolated from the root canal and blood samples were identical within patients, but varied between patients. Facultative anaerobic bacteria including Streptococcus sanguis were recovered from only one root canal sample and not from the blood samples.

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