The apical border plaque in chronic adult periodontitis. An ultrastructural study. I. Morphology, structure, and cell content
- PMID: 1573539
- DOI: 10.1902/jop.1992.63.4.243
The apical border plaque in chronic adult periodontitis. An ultrastructural study. I. Morphology, structure, and cell content
Abstract
THIS STUDY CONCERNS THE APICAL BORDER (AB) plaque in relation to chronic adult periodontitis (AP). Fifty-six teeth from 24 patients with AP were examined by transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The AB was not discrete with islands of bacteria in the so-called plaque-free zone (PFZ). Coronal to the AB, the established plaque commonly consisted of three to four layers of Gram-positive and Gram-negative cocci, rods, filaments, and spirochetes and a superficial layer, mainly of spirochetes, but including filaments, "test tube brush," and "corn-cob" formations. The most apical apparently intact organisms in the PFZ were in bacterial islands or in isolation and were predominantly Gram-negative cocci and rods, with occasional other morphotypes. The most apical microorganisms were invariably ghost cells. A cuticle of varying thickness and structure was present at the plaque/tooth interface. It was concluded that there was a limited range of intact bacterial morphotypes in the apical border plaque in chronic periodontitis.
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
