Periodontal Immunology Flashcards

1
Q

what is gingivitis?

A
  • inflammation localised to the gingival tissues
  • acute inflammation
  • normal physiological response to infection or injury
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2
Q

what is periodontitis?

A
  • inflammation of the gingival tissues and supporting periodontal structures (periodontal ligament and alveolar bone)
  • chronic inflammation
  • pathological inflammatory response associated with tissue destruction
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3
Q

is gingivitis or periodontitis reversible?

A
gingivitis = YES
periodontitis = NO
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4
Q

what is the function of gingival crevicular fluid?

A

predominant immune defence of sublingual portion of teeth and it contains:

  • cytokines
  • chemokines
  • IgG
  • AMPs
  • lactoferrin
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5
Q

how does the oral mucosa play a part in immunological defence?

A

acts as a physical and functional barrier

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6
Q

how does the oral mucosa act as a functional barrier?

A

can detect & respond to microbial challenge through activation of TLRs, this leads to activation of inflammatory pathways

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7
Q

can periodontitis occur in the absence of bacteria?

A

NO

- bacteria is the trigger for inflammation

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8
Q

explain the meaning of polymicrobial dysbiosis in relation to periodontitis?

A

periodontitis is associated with a COMMUNITY of microorganisms that work together to actively disrupt the normal homeostatic balance of the oral cavity (for their own benefit)

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9
Q

what are some virulence factors of P. gingivalis?

A
  • asaccharolytic
  • gingipains
  • atypical LPS
  • inflammophilic
  • drives dysbiosis
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10
Q

what is the meaning of asaccharolytic?

A

a organism gets nutrients from breakdown of proteins and peptides (not carbs)

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11
Q

what is the aetiology of periodontitis associated with?

A
  • accumulated plaque bacteria
  • presence of periodontal pathogens
  • polymicrobial dysbiosis
    in SUSCEPTIBLE HOSTS***
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12
Q

what are the hallmark clinical signs of periodontitis?

A
  • increase in pocket depth
  • attachment loss
  • degradation of alveolar bone
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13
Q

what events occur that cause alveolar bone resorption?

A
  1. bacterial products bind TLRs on epithelium which stimulates secretion of cytokines, chemokines and AMPs
  2. vasodilation occurs and selective recruitment of leukocytes (neutrophils, monocytes and lymphocytes)
  3. bacterial products activate neutrophils, further release of pro-inflammatory mediators
  4. activated lymphocytes express RANKL & the RANKL/OPG balance is disrupted
  5. RANKL binds RANK on osteoclast precursors which activates osteoclastogenesis leading to alveolar bone resorption
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14
Q

what is the role of adaptive immunity in periodontal destruction?

A
  • T and B lymphocytes present in early lesion
  • unable to regulate dysbiotic biofilm
  • inflammation induces alveolar bone loss and loss of attatchment
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