Iwai Takehisa, Inoue Yoshinori, Umeda Makoto, Huang Yi, Kurihara Nobuhisa, Koike Morio, Ishikawa Isao
Department of Surgery, Division of Vascular Surgery, Periodontology, Tokyo Medical and Dental University, Japan.
J Vasc Surg. 2005 Jul;42(1):107-15. doi: 10.1016/j.jvs.2005.03.016.
Recent studies have suggested that infectious organisms play a role in vascular diseases. In this study, to explore a possible link between oral infection and Buerger disease, we investigated whether oral (periodontal) bacteria were present in occluded arteries removed from patients with characteristic Buerger disease.
Fourteen male patients with a smoking history who had developed characteristics of Buerger disease before the age of 50 years were included in this study. Occluded arteries, including superficial femoral (n = 4), popliteal (n = 2), anterior tibial (n = 4), and posterior tibial (n = 4) arteries, were removed and studied. A periodontist performed a periodontal examination on each patient and collected dental plaque and saliva samples from them at the same time. The polymerase chain reaction method was applied to detect whether seven species of periodontal bacteria--Porphyromonas gingivalis, Tannerella forsythensis, Treponema denticola, Campylobacter rectus, Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans, Prevotella intermedia , and Prevotella nigrescens--were present in the occluded arteries and oral samples. In addition, arterial specimens from seven control patients were examined by polymerase chain reaction analysis.
DNA of oral bacteria was detected in 13 of 14 arterial samples and all oral samples of patients with Buerger disease. Treponema denticola was found in 12 arterial and all oral samples. Campylobacter rectus, Porphyromonas gingivalis, Prevotella intermedia, Tannerella forsythensis, and Prevotella nigrescens were found in 14% to 43% of the arterial samples and 71% to 100% of the oral samples. A pathologic examination revealed that arterial specimens showed the characteristics of an intermediate-chronic-stage or chronic-stage lesion of Buerger disease. All 14 patients with Buerger disease had moderate to severe periodontitis. None of the control arterial samples was positive for periodontal bacteria.
This is the first study to identify oral microorganisms in the lesions of Buerger disease. Our findings suggest a possible etiologic link between Buerger disease and chronic infections such as oral bacterial infections.
近期研究表明,感染性生物体在血管疾病中起作用。在本研究中,为探索口腔感染与血栓闭塞性脉管炎之间的可能联系,我们调查了从具有典型血栓闭塞性脉管炎的患者身上移除的闭塞动脉中是否存在口腔(牙周)细菌。
本研究纳入了14名有吸烟史且在50岁之前出现血栓闭塞性脉管炎特征的男性患者。移除并研究了闭塞动脉,包括股浅动脉(n = 4)、腘动脉(n = 2)、胫前动脉(n = 4)和胫后动脉(n = 4)。一名牙周病医生对每位患者进行了牙周检查,并同时采集了他们的牙菌斑和唾液样本。应用聚合酶链反应方法检测7种牙周细菌——牙龈卟啉单胞菌、福赛坦氏菌、具核梭杆菌、直肠弯曲菌、伴放线放线杆菌、中间普氏菌和变黑普氏菌——是否存在于闭塞动脉和口腔样本中。此外,通过聚合酶链反应分析检查了7名对照患者的动脉标本。
在14例动脉样本中的13例以及血栓闭塞性脉管炎患者的所有口腔样本中检测到口腔细菌DNA。在12例动脉样本和所有口腔样本中发现了具核梭杆菌。在14%至43%的动脉样本和71%至100%的口腔样本中发现了直肠弯曲菌、牙龈卟啉单胞菌、中间普氏菌、福赛坦氏菌和变黑普氏菌。病理检查显示,动脉标本呈现出血栓闭塞性脉管炎的中慢性期或慢性期病变特征。所有14例血栓闭塞性脉管炎患者均患有中度至重度牙周炎。对照动脉样本中没有一个对牙周细菌呈阳性反应。
这是第一项在血栓闭塞性脉管炎病变中鉴定口腔微生物的研究。我们的研究结果表明,血栓闭塞性脉管炎与慢性感染(如口腔细菌感染)之间可能存在病因学联系。