Clinical, Microbiological and Immunological Studies of a Family With a High Prevalence of Early‐Onset Periodontitis

Abstract
Extensive clinical, laboratory and microbiological studies were performed on members of a family with an unusually high prevalence of early-onset severe periodontitis. Clinical observations included intraoral photographs and assessment of inflammation, plaque, probing depths and bone loss. Pocket bacteria were sampled, cultivated and identified. Immunological studies included assessment in vitro of neutrophil (PMN) and monocyte (MN) chemotaxis, assessment of PMN phagocytosis and other functions using the iodination assay, measurement of serum opsonic and chemoattractant activities and determination of levels of serum antibodies specific to various putative periodontal pathogens. The proband, a 19-year-old white woman, had rapidly progressive periodontitis (RP). Of her six siblings available for study, all had juvenile periodontitis (JP), and both parents had been edentulous since early adulthood. Early edentulism and recurrent infections, especially otitis media, were prevalent in the forebearers, especially on the maternal side. Two married sisters of the proband had young male children with recurrent infections. Abnormalities in leukocyte chemotaxis were found in the proband, in two of her siblings and in both parents. The pocket flora was predominantly Gram-negative, anaerobic rods with a high prevalence of Bacteroides species, and serum antibodies specific to Bacteroides species were detected in the sera of five of the seven patients studied. Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans was not found in any of the pockets studied, nor were antibodies specific to any of the three known serotypes of this bacterium detected in the serum of any of the patients. There was a relatively good correlation between the bacterial species isolated from the periodontal pockets and the antibodies found in the serum. PMN iodination and serum opsonic activity were normal in all of the patients. Thus not all JP patients have detectable Actinobacillus species in their periodontal pockets, nor do all have antibody detectable with the techniques we used specific to these bacteria in their serum. In contrast, JP patients may have Bacteroides species in their periodontal pockets and antibody specific to Bacteroides species in their serum. Although abnormal leukocyte chemotaxis is generally common in RP and JP patients, in this family the correlation between this defect and the presence of these diseases was poor.
Funding Information
  • National Institutes of Health (DE‐02600, DE‐07063, and DE‐04881)