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J Am Dent Assoc, Vol 129, No 2, 187-194.
© 1998 American Dental Association | ![]() |
RESEARCH |
The authors describe a clinico-pathologic study that evaluated whether dentinal carious lesions are colonized by candidal organismsand if so, whether there is a relationship between dentinal carious lesion colonization and clinical oral candidiasis, or OC, in HIV infection. Using light microscopy, the authors examined 30 extracted teeth with dentinal carious lesions from people in each of two groups: 30 consecutively treated HIV-positive patients and 30 consecutively treated HIV-negative patients. OC was diagnosed only in HIV-positive patients (40 percent). The dentinal carious lesion pattern in both groups was similar in occlusal, root and proximal caries. Candidal colonization of carious dentinal tubules was more frequent in HIV-positive subjects than it was in HIV-negative subjects. This research shows that it may be important to restore dentinal caries in HIV-infected patients to remove a protected niche for candidal organisms.
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J.A. Phelan, R. Mulligan, E. Nelson, J. Brunelle, M.E.A.F. Alves, M. Navazesh, and D. Greenspan Dental Caries in HIV-seropositive Women J. Dent. Res., November 1, 2004; 83(11): 869 - 873. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J.A. Phelan, R. Mulligan, E. Nelson, J. Brunelle, M.E.A.F. Alves, M. Navazesh, and D. Greenspan Dental Caries in HIV-seropositive Women Journal of Dental Research, November 1, 2004; 83(11): 869 - 873. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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