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Acta Odontologica Scandinavica | 1990

Associations between six DNA probe-detected periodontal bacteria and alveolar bone loss and other clinical signs of periodontitis.

Jasim M. Albandar; Ingar Olsen; Per Gjermo

The purpose of the present study was to assess the associations between the presence and amounts of Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans, Bacteroides gingivalis, B. intermedius, Eikenella corrodens, Wolinella recta, and Fusobacterium nucleatum in the periodontal pocket and the degree of alveolar bone loss and other clinical signs of periodonitis, such as probing pocket depth, attachment level, and presence of bleeding on probing at the same site. The study material comprised 16 subjects with or without approximal sites showing longitudinal alveolar bone loss who were selected from a group of 142 subjects monitored radiographically over the past 4 years. In this group 105 sites were examined, of which 58 showed recent alveolar bone loss greater than or equal to 1 mm. Subgingival plaque was collected with absorbent paper points and hybridized with 32P-labeled DNA probes specific for the above-mentioned bacteria. The amount of each bacterial species was correlated with the degree of bone loss over time and the three clinical measurements by means of Spearman rank correlation. A. actinomycetemcomitans showed poor correlations with all three clinical signs of periodontal inflammation, whereas B. gingivalis and W. recta demonstrated significant positive correlations with the three clinical measurements and with attachment level and pocket depth, respectively. In addition, the amount of A. actinomycetemcomitans, B. gingivalis and W. recta showed significant positive correlation with the extent of alveolar bone loss at the site. In contrast, the amounts of B. intermedius, E. corrodens, and F. nucleatum showed negative correlations with all four measurements.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Acta Odontologica Scandinavica | 1987

Radiographic quantification of alveolar bone level changes: Predictors of longitudinal bone loss

Jasim M. Albandar; Jostein Rise; Dhia K. Abbas

The purpose of the present study was to determine the relative importance of a set of predictors for the radiographic change in alveolar bone level over 2 years in a group of 180 subjects and to assess the fit of the applied multivariate model. The included predictors were age, sex, initial bone level, type of initial lesion, tooth type, proximal tooth surface, calculus, and the presence of metal crowns or proximal fillings. The multivariate method of choice was multiple classification analysis. The results indicated that in descending order tooth type, initial bone level, and age were the most important predictors. Sex, calculus, and crown and filling margins also showed significant direct effects (beta) on longitudinal bone loss (p less than 0.05). However, their relative importance was far less than that of tooth type, initial bone level, and age. Proximal side showed no significant direct effect. Using seven predictors, the applied multivariate model explained 20% of the variance in longitudinal bone loss.


Acta Odontologica Scandinavica | 1988

Pattern of alveolar bone loss and reliability of measurements of the radiographic technique

Jostein Rise; Jasim M. Albandar

The purposes of this paper were to study the pattern of bone loss among different teeth at the individual level and to study the effect of using different aggregated units of analysis on measurement error. Bone loss was assessed in standardized periapical radiographs from 293 subjects (18-68 years), and the mean bone loss score for each tooth type was calculated. These were then correlated by means of factor analysis to study the bone loss pattern. Reliability (measurement error) was studied by the internal consistency and the test-retest methods. The pattern of bone loss showed a unidimensional pattern, indicating that any tooth will work equally well as a dependent variable for epidemiologic descriptive purposes. However, a more thorough analysis also showed a multidimensional pattern in terms of four dimensions, which correspond to four tooth groups: incisors, upper premolars, lower premolars, and molars. The four dimensions accounted for 80% of the total variance. The multidimensional pattern may be important for the modeling of bone loss; thus different models may explain the four dimensions (indices) used as dependent variables. The reliability (internal consistency) of the four indices was satisfactory. By the test-retest method, reliability was higher when the more aggregated unit (the individual) was used.


Acta Odontologica Scandinavica | 1987

Attachment of human gingival fibroblasts to planed root surfaces exposed to human plasma in vitro

Dhia K. Abbas; Jasim M. Albandar; Kristen Helgeland; Jan R. Johansen

We studied the effect of exposing planed dentin surfaces (DS) to human plasma on the attachment of human gingival fibroblasts (HGF) in vitro as compared with their attachment to citric-acid-demineralized DS. Sixty-six DS were prepared from root-planed roots of surgically extracted human third molars. In a pilot experiment 30 DS were demineralized in citric acid (pH 1.0 for 3 min), and each of 3 DS were placed in a culture dish and incubated with fresh plasma for 0, 10, or 30 sec, 1, 10, or 30 min, or 1, 1.5, 2, or 4h. In a second experiment, three culture dishes containing three DS each were assigned to each of four groups. These were untreated (control), incubated with plasma for 2h, acid-demineralized only, or acid-demineralized and then incubated with plasma for 2h. To each dish was added 0.2 X 10(6) HGF, and these were incubated for 2, 6, or 24 h. The unattached cells were then removed, and the DS fixed and processed for SEM. The results showed that exposing demineralized dentin surfaces to plasma causes the absorption of a coating layer, presumably of organic nature, as early as 30 sec after exposure. Acid-demineralized DS alone or together with plasma treatment enhanced both the attachment and the growth of HGF. However, treatment with plasma alone seemed to enhance the HGF attachment less than did acid demineralization alone.


Journal of Clinical Periodontology | 1986

Radiographic quantification of alveolar bone level changes. A 2-year longitudinal study in man

Jasim M. Albandar; Rise J; Gjermo P; Johansen


Journal of Clinical Periodontology | 1986

Radiographic quantification of alveolar bone level changes. Comparison of 3 currently used methods.

Jasim M. Albandar; Dhia K. Abbas


Journal of Clinical Periodontology | 1988

Variation in prevalence of radiographic alveolar bone loss in subgroups of 14-year-old schoolchildren in Oslo.

Anne Merete Aass; Jasim M. Albandar; R. Aasenden; Tore Tollefsen; Per Gjermo


Journal of Clinical Periodontology | 1989

Validity and reliability of alveolar bone level measurements made on dry skulls

Jasim M. Albandar


Journal of Periodontal Research | 1990

Some predictors of radiographic alveolar bone height reduction over 6 years

Jasim M. Albandar


Journal of Clinical Periodontology | 1991

Periodontal disease progression in teenagers with no preventive dental care provisions

Jasim M. Albandar; V. S. Baghdady; L. J. Ghose

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