Experimental oral candidosis in the mouse: microbiologic and histologic aspects

Abstract
A model of oral candidosis was developed in order to investigate histologic and microbiologic aspects of this host-parasite interaction under controlled experimental conditions. Normal adult CD-1 mice were inoculated by the topical application of 10(8) Candida albicans blastospores, and oral colonization was monitored by the quantitative culturing of saliva samples and of digested oral mucosa. Tissue sections of the mucosa were examined in a kinetic study ranging from 2 h to 13 days postinoculation. We report here that oral colonization by C. albicans can be induced in normal adult mice without the use of any compromising agent and that the animals recover from this mucosal infection following a reproducible pattern. Temporal analysis of the oral histopathology showed that distinct patterns of inflammation are associated with particular stages in the development of the infectious foci. This experimental model offers a means of further investigating the host-parasite interactions involved in the onset and development of oral candidosis.