Korean J Intern Med.  2000 Dec;15(3):187-194.

Helicobacter pylori in Dental Plaque and Saliva

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Internal Medicine, Kangnam General Hospital, Public Corporation, Seoul, Korea.
  • 2Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Kangnam General Hospital, Public Corporation, Seoul, Korea.
  • 3Department of Microbiology and Institute of Biomedical Science, Hanyang University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.
  • 4Department of Internal Medicine and Liver Research Institute, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: About half of the world population is infected with H. pylori, but the transmission and the source of this infection are still unclear. Recently, dental plaque (DP) and saliva have been implicated as possible sources of H. pylori infection. This study was done to investigate the detection rates of H. pylori in the DP and saliva by use of PCR depending on H. pylori infection state of gastric mucosa.
METHODS
In 46 subjects, gastric H. pylori colonization was evaluated with CLO test, microscopy of Gram stained mucosal smear, culture and histology after modified Giemsa staining in the antrum and body, respectively. A patient was regarded as H. pylori positive if one or more of the four aforementioned test methods demonstrated H. pylori colonization of the gastric mucosa. For detection of H. pylori in the DP and saliva, PCR assay was done with ET4-U and ET4-L primers. To estimate the sensitivity and specificity of this PCR, H. pylori positivity was evaluated in the antrum and body, separately.
RESULTS
The sensitivity of mucosal PCR was 50.0% (27/54) and the specificity 86.8% (33/38). When a subject was regarded as H. pyloi positive, if either antrum or body mucosal H. pylori was is positive, the positive rate of mucosal PCR was 62.1% (18 subjects) in the 29 H. pylori-positive and 17.6% (3 subjects) in the 17 H. pylori-negative subjects. DP PCR was positive in 2 of 29 H. pylori-positive subjects (6.9%) and none in the 17 H. pylori-negative (0%). Saliva PCR was positive in 4 of 14 H. pylori-positive subjects (28.6%) and none of 6 H. pylori-negative (0%).
CONCLUSION
The detection rates of H. pylori in DP and saliva by PCR were rather low, 6.9% and 28.6%, respectively, and these rates might have been underestimated by low sensitivity of the PCR method used in this study. However, the results that H. pylori was found in the DP and saliva suggest that the oral cavity can perform a role as a reservoir of H. pylori in Korea.

Keyword

Helicobacter pylori; Dental plaque; Saliva; Polymerase chain reaction

MeSH Terms

Dental Plaque/microbiology*
Gastric Mucosa/microbiology
Helicobacter pylori/isolation & purification*
Human
Polymerase Chain Reaction
Saliva/microbiology*
Sensitivity and Specificity
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