Title: Investigation of Bacteremia Following Orthodontic Debanding
Abstract: This article is important because little scientific work has been done to investigate the effect of common orthodontic procedures on the presence of measurable bacteria in the bloodstream. After approximately 1000 case reports and case series, we now know that the consequence of displaced oral bacteria from dental manipulations can cause death or serious illness from bacterial endocarditis. 1 Bacteremia is a necessary intermediate in the causal pathway of endocarditis, but it must act in conjunction with other risk factors, such as the presence of a damaged heart valve. Many other factors may determine whether bacteremia will lead to endocarditis in a person with cardiac pathology. These factors, as extrapolated from animal models, include the size of the bacteremia, the ability of the bacteria to attach, whether other infections are present, and the immunocompetence of the person. 2 Studies of bacteremia after procedures have demonstrated their potential to cause bacterial endocarditis, but it is a very rough approximation of the risk. What we really should be interested in is whether orthodontic procedures increase the risk of endocarditis or other systemic diseases. For example, suture removal, periodontal probing, intraligamental injections, and other minor dental procedures have been shown to cause bacteremia. However, few if any cases of endocarditis associated with these procedures have been reported in the literature over the past 70 years. High frequency of bacteremia does not mean high endocarditis risk. However, procedures that create no measurable bacteremia are generally disregarded as potential causes of endocarditis. More significantly, several controlled epidemiological studies have shown an increased risk of endocarditis after some types of dental procedures that generally cause bacteremia, such as dental extractions, root canal therapy, and periodontal scaling. Performing these analytic epidemiological studies is difficult, costly, and complex, hence, despite their ‘‘proxy’’ nature, studies of the incidence of bacteremia are still needed. Four case reports of endocarditis temporally associated with orthodontic treatment have been published: Hobson and Clark, 3 Dajani, 4 and Biancaniello and Romero 5 (2 cases). Each of these cases was associated with minor adjustments, not with molar banding or debanding. Although
Publication Year: 2009
Publication Date: 2009-07-15
Language: en
Type: article
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Cited By Count: 1
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