| Literature DB >> 32089900 |
Moody Kaldas1,2, André Barghorn3, Patrick R Schmidlin2.
Abstract
Actinomycosis is a chronic suppurative infection primarily caused by anaerobic gram-positive filamentous bacteria, primarily of the genus Actinomyces. Oral-cervicofacial actinomycosis is the localization found most often, presenting as a soft tissue swelling, an abscess, a mass lesion, or sometimes an ulcerative lesion. Periodontitis-like lesions, however, are rare findings. This report describes the case of a 41-year-old healthy female patient (nonsmoker), who was referred to the clinic with dull and throbbing pain in the second quadrant. Tooth 25 showed increased mobility and probing pocket depths up to 10 mm, with profuse bleeding upon probing. Radiographically, considerable interproximal horizontal bone loss was found, and the diagnosis of periodontitis stage 3, grade C was made. The situation was initially stabilized with adhesive splinting and local anti-infective therapy. Two weeks later, the bone defect was treated with guided tissue regeneration (GTR) using a xenogenic filler material (BioOss Collagen) and a resorbable membrane (Bio-Gide). Due to a suspicious appearance of the excised granulation tissue, the collected fragments were sent for histopathological evaluation. This evaluation revealed a chronic granulomatous inflammation with the presence of filamentous bacterial colonies, consistent with Actinomyces. The patient was successfully treated. While there are only few reports in the literature, actinomycotic lesions represent a rare but possible finding in cases with localized periodontal destruction. In conclusion, systematic biopsy of the infrabony tissue in localized periodontal lesions may help to provide a more accurate counting of Actinomyces-associated lesions, thereby improving diagnosis, therapy, and prevention.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32089900 PMCID: PMC7021467 DOI: 10.1155/2020/5961452
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Dent
Figure 1Clinical images of the case before therapy (a, b). A periodontal flap was raised (c), and granulation tissue was removed (d). The defect (e) was filled with a xenogenic material and covered with a resorbable membrane (f).
Figure 2Radiographs before (a) and after surgery (b).
Figure 3Histology of a representative tissue fragment with clearly visible bone trabeculae and neutrophil infiltration (a), at higher magnification (b). Also visible were different colonies of bacteria (mainly Actinomyces spp.) between and adherent between the tissue fragments (c, d).
Figure 4Clinical outcome revealed no residual pockets > 3 mm and no bleeding on probing; some staining was visible due to rinsing with chlorhexidine (a–c). The radiograph showed a densification of the grafted site and stable conditions (d).
Overview on the available case reports.
| Study | Clinical diagnosis | Histology | Age/sex | Tooth/teeth | Systemic diseases | Therapy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Adult periodontitis, local abscess | Yes | 60/f | 33/34 | n.a. | Debridement, doxycycline, chlorhexidine |
| [ | Localized periodontitis | Yes/no images shown | 38/f | 26/27 | Depression | Debridement, excision, amoxicillin |
| [ | Chronic periodontitis | Yes | 46/f | 46 | Rheumatic mitral insufficiency | Scalin & root planning, flap surgery with GTR, amoxicillin with clavulanate |
| [ | Juvenile periodontitis | Yes | 14/f | 33/34 | Epilepsy | Excision, penicillin |
| This study | Localized severe periodontitis stage 3 and grade C | Yes | 41/f | 25/26 | Healthy | Flap surgery and GTR |
n.a.: not available; f: female; GTR: guided tissue regeneration.