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INVASION OF DENTINAL TUBULES BY ORAL BACTERIA
R.M. Love1,* and
H.F. Jenkinson2
1 Department of Stomatology, University of Otago School of Dentistry, PO Box 647, Dunedin, New Zealand;
2 Department of Oral and Dental Science, University of Bristol Dental School, Bristol BS1 2LY, United Kingdom

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Figure 1. Common sites of bacterial invasion of dentin. Bacteria invading from the oral cavity (i, ii, iii, iv, v) extend toward the dental pulp space (A) and may result in inflammatory disease and infection of the pulp and periapical tissues. (B) Periapical radiograph demonstrating chronic periapical periodontitis of an upper left central incisor subsequent to infection of the root canal via an enamel-dentin crack. Bacteria invading radicular dentin (v) from an infected root canal invade outward toward the external root surface (C) and may be responsible for persistent root canal infection and inflammatory disease of the surrounding tissues. (Reprinted and modified with permission from Love, 1997.)
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Figure 2. Transmission electron micrographs of sections of dentin colonized by S. gordonii. (A) Individual bacterial cells adhering to the wall of a dentinal tubule, with fibrillar surface material visible at the site of association between bacterial cells and tubule. Bar: 0.5 µm. (B) A group of streptococcal cells in intimate contact with a tubule wall. Bar: 1.0 µm. (Reproduced with permission from Love et al., 1997.)
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Figure 3. Transverse sections of human roots showing: (A) invasion of dentinal tubules by S. gordonii wild-type cells; and (B) no dentinal tubule invasion by S. gordonii in the presence of acid-soluble collagen type I. Bar: 50 µm. (Reproduced in modified form with permission from Love et al., 1997.)
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Critical Reviews in Oral Biology & Medicine, Vol. 13, No. 2,
171-183 (2002)
DOI: 10.1177/154411130201300207

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