| Literature DB >> 22111010 |
Smitha Byadarahally Raju1, Shashanka Rajappa.
Abstract
Various techniques are available for the isolation of Candida within the oral cavity. Such methods play an important role in the diagnosis and management of oral candidosis. The growing importance of Candida is in part related to the emergence of HIV infection and the more widespread use of immunosuppressive chemotherapy. Along with the Candida albicans there has been a greater recognition of the importance of the nonalbicans Candida species in oral candidosis. Identification of infecting strains of Candida is important because isolates of Candida species differ widely, both in their ability to cause infection and also in their susceptibility to antifungal agents. Thus this review provides an overview of the reliable methods of candidal isolation and identification of isolates from the oral cavity.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22111010 PMCID: PMC3205665 DOI: 10.5402/2011/487921
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ISRN Dent ISSN: 2090-4371
Species of Candida.
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Virulence factors associated with Candida Albicans.
| Virulence factor | Effect |
|---|---|
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| Relative cell surface hydrophobicity | Nonspecific adherence process |
| Expression of cell surface adhesion molecules | Facilitates specific adherence mechanisms |
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| High frequency phenotypic switching | Antigenic modification through frequent cell surface changes |
| Hyphal development | Reduces likelihood of phagocytosis; allows phagocytosed yeast to escape phagocyte |
| Secreted aspartyl proteinase production | Secretary IgA destruction |
| Binding of complement molecules | Antigenic masking |
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| Hyphal development | Promotes invasion of oral epithelium |
| Secreted aspartyl proteinase production | Host cell and extracellular matrix damage |
| Phospholipase production | Damage to host cells |
Classification of oral candidosis.
| Primary oral candidosis (Group I) | Secondary oral candidosis (Group II) | |
|---|---|---|
| The “primary triad”: | Condition | Subgroup |
| Pseudomembranous (mainly acute) | Familial chronic mucocutaneous candidosis | 1 |
| Erythematous (acute/chronic) | Diffuse chronic mucocutaneous candidosis | 2 |
| Hyperplastic (mainly chronic) | Candidosis endocrinopathy syndrome | 3 |
| (i) Plaque-like | Familial mucocutaneous candidosis | 4 |
| (ii) Nodular/speckled | Severe combined immunodeficiency | 5a |
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| Di George syndrome | 5b |
| Denture stomatitis | Chronic granulomatous disease | 5c |
| Angular cheilitis | Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome | 6 |
| Median rhomboid glossitis | — | — |
| Linear gingival erythema | — | — |
Methods of recovering Candida from the oral cavity.
| Isolation method | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| Culture of whole saliva | Sensitive; viable organisms isolated | Problems may occur with collection of sample; not site specific |
| Concentrated oral rinse | Quantitative; viable cells isolated | Some patients have difficulty in using rinse; not site specific |
| Swab | Simple to use; viable cells isolated; site specific | Difficult to standardize |
| Smear | Simple to use; not reliant on culture | Viable cells not determined; species identity not readily confirmed |
| Imprint culture | Quantitative; viable cells isolated; site specific | Some sites difficult to sample |
| Biopsy | Essential for chronic hyperplastic candidosis | Invasive; not appropriate for other forms of candidosis |
Morphological features of Candida species.
| Feature | |
|---|---|
| Size ( | 3–6 |
| Shape | Spherical or oval |
| Number of buds | Single; chains |
| Attachment of buds | Narrow |
| Thickness | Thin |
| Pseudohyphae &/or hyphae | Characteristic |
| Number of nuclei | Single |
Figure 1Schematic representation of isolation and identification of Candida species from the oral cavity.