Abstract

The acute dental abscess is frequently underestimated in terms of its morbidity and mortality. The risk of potential serious consequences arising from the spread of a dental abscess is still relevant today with many hospital admissions for dental sepsis. The acute dental abscess is usually polymicrobial comprising facultative anaerobes, such as viridans group streptococci and the Streptococcus anginosus group, with predominantly strict anaerobes, such as anaerobic cocci, Prevotella and Fusobacterium species. The use of non-culture techniques has expanded our insight into the microbial diversity of the causative agents, identifying such organisms as Treponema species and anaerobic Gram-positive rods such as Bulleidia extructa, Cryptobacterium curtum and Mogibacterium timidum. Despite some reports of increasing antimicrobial resistance in isolates from acute dental infection, the vast majority of localized dental abscesses respond to surgical treatment, with antimicrobials limited to spreading and severe infections. The microbiology and treatment of the acute localized abscess and severe spreading odontogenic infections are reviewed.

Highlights

  • The acute dental abscess is frequently underestimated in terms of its morbidity and mortality

  • The main signs and symptoms of the acute dental abscess are pain, swelling, erythema and suppuration usually localized to the affected tooth, the abscess can frequently spread causing a spreading odontogenic infection which can be accompanied by sepsis syndrome

  • The potential for a dental abscess to spread causing severe sepsis and death has been known since antiquity the role of bacteria in this process was not recognized until the turn of the 20th century (Turner Thomas, 1908)

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Summary

The microbiology of the acute dental abscess

The acute dental abscess is frequently underestimated in terms of its morbidity and mortality. The risk of potential serious consequences arising from the spread of a dental abscess is still relevant today with many hospital admissions for dental sepsis. The acute dental abscess is usually polymicrobial comprising facultative anaerobes, such as viridans group streptococci and the Streptococcus anginosus group, with predominantly strict anaerobes, such as anaerobic cocci, Prevotella and Fusobacterium species. Despite some reports of increasing antimicrobial resistance in isolates from acute dental infection, the vast majority of localized dental abscesses respond to surgical treatment, with antimicrobials limited to spreading and severe infections. The microbiology and treatment of the acute localized abscess and severe spreading odontogenic infections are reviewed

Introduction
Background
Cultural analysis of the acute dental abscess
Facultative anaerobes
Unfamiliar species
Antibiotic resistance
Severe odontogenic infection
Findings
Conclusions

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