Bacteriology of Human Gingivitis

Abstract
The subgingival bacterial floras of naturally occurring gingivitis in adults and children were characterized and compared with the floras of other periodontal conditions previously studied. The composition of the gingivitis floras was found to be distinct from that of floras associated with health or with moderate, severe, or juvenile periodontitis. There were no major differences between the floras of naturally-occurring gingivitis and the floras of the human experimental gingivitis model. Data indicated that the flora of healthy sites within a mouth is influenced by the number of inflamed sites, which argues against independence of sites bacteriologically. Proportions of ten bacterial species increased in both gingivitis and periodontitis, as compared with health, in both adults and children. These species were found in both affected and unaffected sites of people with gingivitis. The numbers of five other cultivable species and the "large treponeme", which was not cultivated, increased in gingivitis and periodontitis of adults only. Significant differences in non-spirochetal floras between children and adults were not found, although they were in the experimental gingivitis model studied previously. Cultivable spirochetes did differ between children and adults. Children had fewer samples positive for spirochetes, and children's positive samples contained greater proportions of T. socranskii subsp. paredis. Some species that predominate in periodontitis, but which are absent from healthy gingivae, were found as a small percentage of the flora in gingivitis. This suggests that increased serum and blood in the gingival crevice encourage species that relate to periodontitis.