Microbiota periodontal y microorganismos aislados de válvulas cardiacas en pacientes sometidos a cirugía de remplazo valvular en una clínica de la ciudad Cali

Translated title of the contribution: Periodontal microbiota and heart valves microorganisms isolated from patients undergoing valve replacement surgery in a clinic in Cali

Sandra Moreno, Beatriz Parra, Javier E. Botero, Freddy Moreno, Daniel Vásquez, Hugo Fernández, Sandra Alba, Sara Gallego, Gilberto Castillo, Adolfo Contreras

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

13 Scopus citations

Abstract

Introduction:

Periodontitis is an infectious disease that affects the support tissue of the teeth and it is associated with different systemic diseases, including cardiovascular disease. Microbiological studies facilitate the detection of microorganisms from subgingival and cardiovascular samples.

Objective:

To describe the cultivable periodontal microbiota and the presence of microorganisms in heart valves from patients undergoing valve replacement surgery in a clinic in Cali.

Materials and methods:

We analyzed 30 subgingival and valvular tissue samples by means of twophase culture medium, supplemented blood agar and trypticase soy agar with antibiotics. Conventional PCR was performed on samples of valve tissue.

Results:

The periodontal pathogens isolated from periodontal pockets were: Fusobacterium nucleatum (50%), Prevotella intermedia/ nigrescens (40%), Campylobacter rectus (40%), Eikenella corrodens (36.7%), Gram negative enteric bacilli (36.7%), Porphyromonas gingivalis (33.3%), and Eubacterium spp. (33.3%). The pathogens isolated from the aortic valve were Propionibacterium acnes (12%), Gram negative enteric bacilli (8%), Bacteroides merdae (4%), and Clostridium bifermentans (4%), and from the mitral valve we isolated P. acnes and Clostridium beijerinckii. Conventional PCR did not return positive results for oral pathogens and bacterial DNA was detected only in two samples.

Conclusions:

Periodontal microbiota of patients undergoing surgery for heart valve replacement consisted of species of Gram-negative bacteria that have been associated with infections in extraoral tissues. However, there is no evidence of the presence of periodontal pathogens in valve tissue, because even though there were valve and subgingival samples positive for Gram-negative enteric bacilli, it is not possible to maintain they corresponded to the same phylogenetic origin.
Translated title of the contributionPeriodontal microbiota and heart valves microorganisms isolated from patients undergoing valve replacement surgery in a clinic in Cali
Original languageSpanish
Pages (from-to)516-525
Number of pages36
JournalBiomedica
Volume37
Issue number4
StatePublished - 2017

Keywords

  • Microbiota
  • periodontitis
  • cardiovascular diseases
  • heart valves
  • virulence
  • bacteremia

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