Herpesviral Infection in Periapical Periodontitis
Samo za registrovane korisnike
2018
Autori
Jakovljević, Aleksandar
Andrić, Miroslav

Knežević, Aleksandra

Miletić, Maja
Beljić-Ivanović, Katarina
Milašin, Jelena

Sabeti, Mohammad
Članak u časopisu (Objavljena verzija)

Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2018
Metapodaci
Prikaz svih podataka o dokumentuApstrakt
Purpose of Review
This review describes the most recent findings on herpesviral infections and offers current concepts of herpesviral role in the pathogenesis of periapical periodontitis.
Recent Findings
Thirty articles reported data on herpesviral infection in periapical periodontitis. Epstein-Barr virus and human cytomegalovirus are the most frequently detected herpesviruses in periapical samples. The main hypothesis postulates a bidirectional herpesviral-bacterial relationship in the etiopathogenesis of periapical periodontitis. A high heterogeneity of herpesviruses incidence was registered within the studies, in part, due to various methodological approaches used in laboratory testing, different inclusion criteria, study design, seroprevalence of herpesviruses, and sociodemographic characteristics of investigated populations.
Summary
Herpesviruses have been shown to potentially impair local host defense in periapical tissue. Although it has been demonstrated that endodonti...c pathogenic bacteria are able to reactivate herpesviruses, further, in vitro studies should provide more data on herpesviruses as a factor in the pathogenesis of the periapical pathoses. It is, therefore, necessary to investigate potential benefits of antiviral therapy in well-designed controlled longitudinal studies.
Ključne reči:
Apical periodontitis / Herpesviruses / Epstein-Barr virus / Human cytomegalovirus / Bone resorptionIzvor:
Current Oral Health Reports, 2018, 5, 4, 255-263Izdavač:
- Springer
Finansiranje / projekti:
Kolekcije
Institucija/grupa
Stomatološki fakultetTY - JOUR AU - Jakovljević, Aleksandar AU - Andrić, Miroslav AU - Knežević, Aleksandra AU - Miletić, Maja AU - Beljić-Ivanović, Katarina AU - Milašin, Jelena AU - Sabeti, Mohammad PY - 2018 UR - https://smile.stomf.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/2595 AB - Purpose of Review This review describes the most recent findings on herpesviral infections and offers current concepts of herpesviral role in the pathogenesis of periapical periodontitis. Recent Findings Thirty articles reported data on herpesviral infection in periapical periodontitis. Epstein-Barr virus and human cytomegalovirus are the most frequently detected herpesviruses in periapical samples. The main hypothesis postulates a bidirectional herpesviral-bacterial relationship in the etiopathogenesis of periapical periodontitis. A high heterogeneity of herpesviruses incidence was registered within the studies, in part, due to various methodological approaches used in laboratory testing, different inclusion criteria, study design, seroprevalence of herpesviruses, and sociodemographic characteristics of investigated populations. Summary Herpesviruses have been shown to potentially impair local host defense in periapical tissue. Although it has been demonstrated that endodontic pathogenic bacteria are able to reactivate herpesviruses, further, in vitro studies should provide more data on herpesviruses as a factor in the pathogenesis of the periapical pathoses. It is, therefore, necessary to investigate potential benefits of antiviral therapy in well-designed controlled longitudinal studies. PB - Springer T2 - Current Oral Health Reports T1 - Herpesviral Infection in Periapical Periodontitis VL - 5 IS - 4 SP - 255 EP - 263 DO - 10.1007/s40496-018-0198-7 ER -
@article{ author = "Jakovljević, Aleksandar and Andrić, Miroslav and Knežević, Aleksandra and Miletić, Maja and Beljić-Ivanović, Katarina and Milašin, Jelena and Sabeti, Mohammad", year = "2018", abstract = "Purpose of Review This review describes the most recent findings on herpesviral infections and offers current concepts of herpesviral role in the pathogenesis of periapical periodontitis. Recent Findings Thirty articles reported data on herpesviral infection in periapical periodontitis. Epstein-Barr virus and human cytomegalovirus are the most frequently detected herpesviruses in periapical samples. The main hypothesis postulates a bidirectional herpesviral-bacterial relationship in the etiopathogenesis of periapical periodontitis. A high heterogeneity of herpesviruses incidence was registered within the studies, in part, due to various methodological approaches used in laboratory testing, different inclusion criteria, study design, seroprevalence of herpesviruses, and sociodemographic characteristics of investigated populations. Summary Herpesviruses have been shown to potentially impair local host defense in periapical tissue. Although it has been demonstrated that endodontic pathogenic bacteria are able to reactivate herpesviruses, further, in vitro studies should provide more data on herpesviruses as a factor in the pathogenesis of the periapical pathoses. It is, therefore, necessary to investigate potential benefits of antiviral therapy in well-designed controlled longitudinal studies.", publisher = "Springer", journal = "Current Oral Health Reports", title = "Herpesviral Infection in Periapical Periodontitis", volume = "5", number = "4", pages = "255-263", doi = "10.1007/s40496-018-0198-7" }
Jakovljević, A., Andrić, M., Knežević, A., Miletić, M., Beljić-Ivanović, K., Milašin, J.,& Sabeti, M.. (2018). Herpesviral Infection in Periapical Periodontitis. in Current Oral Health Reports Springer., 5(4), 255-263. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40496-018-0198-7
Jakovljević A, Andrić M, Knežević A, Miletić M, Beljić-Ivanović K, Milašin J, Sabeti M. Herpesviral Infection in Periapical Periodontitis. in Current Oral Health Reports. 2018;5(4):255-263. doi:10.1007/s40496-018-0198-7 .
Jakovljević, Aleksandar, Andrić, Miroslav, Knežević, Aleksandra, Miletić, Maja, Beljić-Ivanović, Katarina, Milašin, Jelena, Sabeti, Mohammad, "Herpesviral Infection in Periapical Periodontitis" in Current Oral Health Reports, 5, no. 4 (2018):255-263, https://doi.org/10.1007/s40496-018-0198-7 . .