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Title: Changes with time in the oral microflora and dental caries induction in hyposalivated rats fed on sucrose diet. Author: Ooshima T, Yoshida T, Aono W, Takei T, Izumitani A, Sobue S, Hamada S. Journal: Microbiol Immunol; 1992; 36(12):1223-31. PubMed ID: 1287402. Abstract: The effects of hyposalivation on the induction of dental caries and the change in oral microflora were examined at weekly intervals in Sprague-Dawley rats fed on diet 2000 containing 56% sucrose. In hyposalivated rats, significant dental caries was induced within one week and its severity increased with the experimental period. Bacteriological examinations demonstrated that the number of total cultivable microorganisms, lactobacilli and Staphylococcus aureus increased significantly shortly after surgical induction of hyposalivation, while the number of streptococci and yeasts did not increase significantly until the 7th week, beyond which time remarkable gross caries developed. A positive correlation was found between the caries score and the recovery of lactobacilli from mandibles of hyposalivated rats, while there was no statistically significant correlation between the caries score and the recoveries of S. aureus. On the other hand, dental caries was not induced in control rats fed on sucrose diet with no surgically-induced hyposalivation. It was also found that the number of lactobacilli increased significantly shortly after diet 2000 was given to control rats, but S. aureus was rarely recovered from the mandibles of control rats throughout the experiments. The roles of lactobacilli and S. aureus in the induction of dental caries under the hyposalivated condition were discussed and it was suggested that lactobacilli may play some significant role in the induction of dental caries in hyposalivated rats.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]